Google Offers Insight for Search Marketers

My most recent column took a look at Google’s new keyword research tool, Insights for Search. Following that, an astute reader wrote to ask for clarification on some of the lesser-described components of the Insights for Search results page.

Her basic question was this: what is the exact relationship between the specific query term, its value, and the values of the top searches related to the specified term? She’s smart to ask, because it’s not necessarily what you might infer at first glance.

Without giving away the reader’s industry, suffice it to say that she came across several top searches terms that had a value of 100. Yet laid against her original query term on a demand graph, the terms had either significantly greater or lesser demand than the original query term. If that’s the case, what does the 100 value mean?

The Magic Number 100

Much of the understanding of Google Insights for Search revolves around its ranking mechanism for related search terms.

As you can see in the example of "boats," the number 100 is associated with the very peak of search demand over the specified period. In the case of "boats," it comes in mid-2004. Therefore, when you search for a single query term, it’s automatically assigned a relative rank of 100.

But don’t look at this 100 as the same scale as that in the related top searches search terms.

Google discusses these related terms in its Help documentation. There, Google says that its system:

    determines relativity by examining searches that have been conducted by a large group of users preceding the search term you’ve entered, as well as after. Keep in mind that top searches are also automatically categorized, so some errors in classification may exist.

Consider this top searches number as a value that measures how related the term is to the original query term, not necessarily how directly similar the actual query demand is. For example, the top related search term for "boats" is "boats for sale" (with a value of 100), yet when you lay the terms side by side and measure their relative search demand, you can see that demand for "boats" far outstrips demand for "boats for sale." Yet what I think Google says by its 100 value for "boats for sale" is that it’s completely related to the term "boats" because the same people search for both terms when searching for the same bit of information. They might not search for them in the exact same quantities, but the same people typically search for them while attempting to satisfy a query.

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Google to launch browser to compete with Microsoft

Chrome intensifies the battle between the tech giants and continues Web software’s drive to supersede the operating system.
By Jessica Guynn, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 2, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO — Bidding to dominate not only what people do on the Web but how they get from site to site, Google Inc. plans to release a browser today to compete with the likes of Internet Explorer and Firefox.

It’s yet another salvo in the company’s intensifying battle with Microsoft Corp., which last week released a beta, or test, version of Internet Explorer 8 that makes it easier to block ads from Google and others.

"This is the first truly serious threat that Microsoft has faced from a well-funded platform," said technology analyst Rob Enderle, president of the Enderle Group.

A beta version of the Google browser, called Chrome, will be available for download by Windows computer users in more than 100 countries. Chrome will offer features that make it easier, faster and safer to browse the Web, the Mountain View, Calif., search giant said in a blog postMonday.

Google has long ruled how people search the Web. Now it is going after how they navigate it, analysts say.

"We like this move by Google and believe it can help to increase or at least maintain its leading search market share," Needham & Co. analyst Mark May said in an e-mail. "As the starting point for nearly every user’s Internet experience, the browser is important online real estate. The market share gains by Firefox in a short period of time show to us that users are looking for better browser experiences."

One feature will allow consumers to run Web-based applications independently, which means that if one program crashes it won’t take down the browser.

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