Posts tagged ‘destination’

Google is ‘all in’ on mobile. AdMob purchased . Operating systems and devices in place. Announcements out the wazoo on just about everything as of late. Now, there is the ability to have your contact phone number show up on your ads on high end mobile devices and the call costs the same as a click. Earth shattering? Nope but it adds to the Google news wave that seems to keep growing. Search Engine Land reports on the announcement that went out to AdWords advertisers recently “your location-specific business phone number will display alongside your destination url in ads that appear on high-end mobile devices. Users will be able to click-to-call your business just as easily as they click to visit your website. You’ll be charged for clicks to call, same as you are for clicks to visit your website.” Google’s variation on the ‘pay per call’ theme is one that should resonate with advertisers for sure. The ability to click on a phone number and make a call has been in place on the organic side but now advertisers can benefit from this smart phone opportunity. I don’t know about you but the rate of innovation from Google in the past few months looks like their version of “Shock and Awe”. There appears to be few areas that they are not busy at improving on and making sure that the world is aware of it. As a result it’s tough for anyone else to get an innovative word in edge wise. While it’s interesting to watch, it’s also the kind of stuff that makes some queasy. It seems that each time Google provides a service that another competitor does there is the underlying current of “there goes the competitive neighborhood”. This eventually may lead to even more talk of Google being too pervasive and too powerful. When does the “whoa, wait a minute there big fella!” talk turn into action from either a competitor or the government itself? Maybe this year will be the year of ‘intervention’. Personally, I hope not but it may not be avoidable.

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Google to Add Mobile ‘Click to Call’ Feature to AdWords

Have you noticed how most bloggers are at their meanest best early in the day? Come 4:20pm, they simply don’t have the same energy levels. You’ve not noticed? Well Google has! And the search giant has a growing tendency to announce potentially polarizing news late in the day. Exhibit A: Google’s launched its own URL shortener called Goo.gl . As the search giant describes it, Goo.gl offers: Stability: Google’s scalable, multi-datacenter infrastructure provides great uptime and a reliable service to our users. Security: As we do with web search, shortened URLs are automatically checked to detect sites that may be malicious and warn users when the short URL resolves to such sites. Speed: At Google we like fast products and we’ve worked hard to ensure this service is quick. We’ll continue to iterate and improve the speed of Google Url Shortener. Goo.gl is also being added as a new feature to Feedburner –letting you “tweet” your new blog post automagically ! So, that’s all sugar and spice, and all things nice. Right? Yes, right now, absolutely. But, so was “nofollow” when that was introduced to save us all from spammers. Fast forward and Google threatens to kick you from its index, if you don’t play by its nofollow rules. I’m not saying that Goo.gl is evil, just that it has the potential to be evil. For example: What if Google starts using this click-thru data as part of its algorithm? How does this effect SEO? What if Google insists that sites with long URLs slow down the web and insists you convert to Goo.gl? Not that far fetched! What if it was added to the Google Toolbar because PageRank is going away–and Google needs a new reason to get you all downloading the toolbar? What if Google starts adding AdSense to the destination URLs? Actually, that might be OK . There are a lot of unanswered questions. Go ahead and use Goo.gl, just don’t do so with that blindfold on!

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Google’s New URL Shortener Goo.gl: Is it Goo.d or Evi.l?

As I mentioned yesterday, I love Bing’s shopping engine . In no small part because I can earn some serious cashback . As long as I make sure I’m getting the lowest price in the first place, the cashback makes it worth using Bing. So, Google Product Search can wave all the new fancy features in front of me that it wants, if I ain’t getting a kickback, I ain’t using Google! OK, maybe some of you aren’t quite so price conscious as me. Maybe for you, shopping is more about the journey, than the destination. If that’s the case, you’re going to love the scenery Google just added. First, we have a new gallery view: We also have new review summaries: Nearby stores: Video product reviews and a mobile friendly interface complete the list of new features. But, what it doesn’t have is this: And, until it does, I’m sticking with Bing! Note: This is not a paid post, but someone, somewhere at Microsoft PR just got a raise.

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Google Product Search: Give Me Cashback or Give Me Death!