Content
24 October 2007, 16:21
SEO, Tags and Customized Google Search
In
del.icio.us, tags are one-word descriptions that users can assign to their
bookmarks. In
Technorati, a tag is more likely a simple category name whereby users can
categorize their posts, photos, and videos with tag logic. In Yahoo's
Flickr, tags work like keywords or labels that users add to their photos to
make them easier to find later or to discover via image search engines and
search engines that provide blended results. For an example, check out my dog's
chewy friends.
Just as the Internet allows users to create and share their own media via the
Web, so too does it enable users to organize digital material their own way with
tags, rather than relying on preexisting formats of classifying information,
such as search engine directories, yellow pages, and nearly any other topically
oriented hierarchical ontology.
A December 2006 Pew Internet
survey finds that 28 percent of Internet users have tagged or categorized
such content online as photos, news stories, and blog posts. On a typical day
online, 7 percent of Internet users say they use tags to categorize online
content.
The idea behind tagging is simple and straightforward, but its ramifications
are complex and multifarious. For the better part of a decade, the primary way
to categorize, retrieve, and discover information on the Internet was through
search engines' automated algorithms, originally topically challenged and highly
imprecise. Of course, this structured organization opened the door for SEO (define)
as a means to influence ranked results.
Tagging has quickly gained popularity because it allows humans to bring a
layer of collective, topically pertinent, and intuitive organization to what
otherwise would be a discombobulated heap of semi-aggregated data, such as
reverse chronological archives or authors pages, and the like. With its inherent
keyword-rich, interlinked, topically concatenated structure, tagging content,
images, and videos has become yet another readily adaptable SEO tactic; one
worthy of inclusion in link-building strategies.
Search Resources
Rooted in folksonomies (define),
tagging systems are generally created by users themselves, rather than site
owners, and make online resources far more accessible and searchable than they
had ever been before. The practice brings a social context to such resources as
blogs, shared bookmarking, photos, videos and even books.
Because tagging is used as an indexing tool and as a way to search for
information, both in specific databases and across the Internet, some say it's
conceivable that tagging technology could one day give search engines like
Google and Yahoo a run for their money. Tagging's growth probably contributes to
a measure of competitive urgency for Google to develop its
Custom Search Engine services and Yahoo to improve its
Search Builderfunctionality.
Yet tagging, at its current development stage, is more a tool for
collaborative social use, not for universal searching. But that doesn't mean
large groupings of tags that collectively aggregate many online sources, known
as tag clouds, could one day become a prominent search choice for many people --
especially if
Eurekster,
Lijit, and
Rollyohave anything to say about it.
Trio of Tag Options
Eurekster started in 2004 with social search, allowing users to organize and
share their search results. Subsequently, Eurekster came out with
swickis, more vertically oriented search technology that improves relevancy
over time, based on community usage, a key factor of tag popularity.
With nearly 100,000 "buzz clouds" (Eurekster's moniker for tag clouds)
widgets created to date, the free service allows user to personalize Web
searches into an ontology that's highly targeted and relevant to its audience.
Users can seed their buzz clouds with their search terms, then Eurekster adds
associated terms based on which searches are popular with the site's visitors.
With Eurekster swickis, users can organize and tag online sources for
aggregated searches of destinations in blogrolls, image and photo collections,
and even videos through its association with
blinkx. And users can actually make a little money on their tagging efforts.
Eurekster offers swicki users with an ad-revenue-share option via AdSense, as
leveraged on the
Ultimate Neopets Cheats blog.
While Eurekster offers advertising revenue as a Swicki creation incentive,
Lijit offers substantive tag search data. Lijit allows users to readily create a
customized tag-based search engine. It'll help search blogs, bookmarks, photos,
blogrolls, and more. Users simply set up the Lijit Search Wijit on their blogs,
and detailed statistics about its use will start rolling in, so users can better
understand and serve their readers.
Let's say you blog about all 2008 presidential candidates. When your readers
use Lijit to search your blog for information about "hillary clinton," the
results might include blog posts you've authored and bookmarks you've made about
other sites' articles and information. Lijit offers a way to extend your trusted
search resources to others.
Rollyo is similar to Lijit in how it allows users to create personalized
search engines based only on sources you trust. Its searchrolls facilitate
exploring, saving, and personalizing searches created by others. According to
Rollyo, about a thousand new searchrolls are created each day.
Rollyo offers interesting search features, as well, like the RollBar
Bookmarklet, which allows users to drag an entire Rollyo experience onto a
browser, and the ability to add a searchroll to
Firefox with one click. High-profile Rollyo-ers include
Arianna Huffington and PBS's "Frontline."
From single-site search to full Web search, Rollyo provides a quick, easy way to
find search results from the sites you trust. Keep in mind, there are some
limitations to the number of online sources you can tap into at any time.
Summing Up Tags
From an SEO perspective, tagging and tag clouds provide an unrivaled form of
alternative navigation. When personalized or customized search results are
combined, tagged, and bookmarked, a complex layer of interlinking is readily
applied to words and phrases, potentially raising your site content's visibility,
as well as that of others, on the search engines.
Simply stated, tagging is SEO friendly. The ontology lends itself to the
creation and concentration of topical themes, which when interlinked to sites,
blogs, photos, videos, and the like, can create a powerful, readily built part
of a link-building strategy. Though tagging is just one tactic of many, it
should not be ignored.
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