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Archive for March, 2010

Google Experiments with Hotel Pricing on Google Maps

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Google announced on Monday, March 22nd, that Google Maps will be experimenting with displaying hotel rates in its local business listings.

With this feature, users will be able to enter a date and the number of nights the user plans to stay at a particular hotel property and see actual prices on selected listings. The price-list will also include other websites who have provided pricing information for that particular hotel.

“This new feature will not change the way that hotels are ranked in Google Maps. Google Maps ranks business listings based on their relevance to the search terms entered, along with geographic distance (where indicated) and other factors, regardless of whether there is an associated price.

While we’re experimenting with this feature, we’re currently working with a limited number of advertisers and it will only be visible to a small portion of users . As always, we’ll evaluate the usefulness and effectiveness of this new feature based on both data and feedback, and hope to make it available to more users and offer prices from more partners over time.”

Read the complete post on the Google Lat Long Blog

Los Angeles Tops the List of Most Energy Star Labeled Buildings

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Los Angeles is the most ‘Energy Starred’ major metropolis in the United States for the second year in a row.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced on Tuesday, March 23rd, that Los Angeles has more Energy Star rated buildings than any other city in the United States. Other cities making up the top five include Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Denver, and Chicago.

From the EPA press release:

“These cities see the importance of taking action on climate change,” said Gina McCarthy, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation. “Communities from Los Angeles to Louisville are reducing greenhouse gases and cutting energy bills with buildings that have earned EPA’s Energy Star.”

It is good to know that we are doing some things right in Los Angeles (and California).

» List of Top 25 Cities with the Most Energy Star Labeled Buildings In 2009 (PDF / 168k)

Who Needs SEO When You Can Do Directory Submissions?

Monday, March 1st, 2010

The above headline is sure to make some people very upset, especially those SEO professionals who are dedicated to delivering ethical services. Luckily, the headline is just a ruse.

As with most things worth having, high search engine rankings do not come easily or quickly (there are exceptions, but your site is most likely not going to be one of them); however, there are countless services (new ones appear on a regular basis) that claim quick, painless, and most importantly cheaply achieved improvements in search engine ranking results. A good portion of these snake-oil services are built around directory submissions.

Before we move on, let us clarify that directory submissions in and of themselves are not a fruitless activity. The type of directory submission, however, is important. If the directories being evaluated for submission have been well researched and are on-topic or at least offer relevant categories for a listing, then they do have some value to bring to a well-balanced (i.e. directory links are not the only links) link-profile. The directory submissions which are the real problem are the ones that claim (or vaguely suggest) that submission to thousands of unknown directories will help improve your search engine rankings. Sadly, this practice is also present in some of the most well known search engine optimization firms—we won’t name any names but you can find them on the first page of Google for relevant industry terms.

With that said, let’s take a look at what these directory submissions promise compared to the real work many SEO companies offer. Here is a list of claims made by one of the major SEO companies that also offers directory/search engine submission services:

Claim: Your site will be submitted to thousands of search engines and directories
Problem: There aren’t thousands of search engines; and there aren’t thousands of worthwhile directories.

Claim: You can opt-in to have your site also submitted to ‘Free-For-All’ directories (read about Google’s view on Free-For-All links – scroll down to midway on the page)
Problem: A service that even offers an option such as ‘free-for-all’ directory submissions is providing a service in direct opposition to what Google states as being unwholesome and detrimental to your rankings.

But that is not all! You also get free SEO advice as part of your directory submission purchase. What a deal! Here is what you get:

Claim: They will verify that your page uses the correct design and HTML tags.
Problem: This statement is so vague that it means virtually nothing.

Claim: They will check whether your keywords are being used correctly and in the proper density.
Problem: There is no ‘proper density’. Even though good content is of utmost importance, keyword density is not. The sites ranking in top 10 for any keyword will have a wide range of keyword densities.

The final claim is that in order to achieve the best results, it is recommended that customers submit their website once per month. Apparently this will help keep your site in the search engines, since some of them tend to drop your listing after a few weeks.

No search engine worth being in will drop any site after an arbitrary period of time. In fact, major search engines consider repeated submissions to be spam.

The discussion about directory submissions is as old as search engine optimization, and is not likely to go away any time soon. The thing to keep in mind is that there is no easy way to the top of the rankings, and any service promising such results at a cheap price is most likely a scam. You are more likely to hurt your rankings (or future ranking potential) by using these types of snake-oil services.