Posts Tagged ‘search engine optimization tips’

6 Ways Google Collects Your Data

Friday, February 5th, 2010

binaryEarlier, we wrote a blog post about Google’s privacy policy. For anyone who uses Google for online search, and especially anyone who has a Google account, it’s a pretty important issue. How much of your data is Google keeping? What does Google know about you? Data collection has been a important part of Google’s competitive advantage, and the company has tried to satisfy its users by being open about how their data is used. But how, exactly, does Google collect its data? Here are the methods that Google uses track and collect information.

  1. Click Tracking. Google keeps a log of all clicks made on just about every Google page. That includes ads, search results, feature clicks. They track clicks made by all users, whether you have a Google account or not.
  2. Forms. Google logs the time, date and location of all entries made into any text boxes on Google Websites.
  3. Cookies. Like many Websites, Google makes use of cookies that can track the activity of user. Not only that, but Google cookies track any Website that has Google’s Doubleclick or Adsense ads on it.
  4. Server Requests. Every request made to Google’s server is stored in its log files. A server request is made whenever Google is used in any capacity, whether it’s being accessed via a Web Browser, a smartphone or through a Google Desktop application.
  5. Javascript. Google keeps small pieces of javascript in millions of Websites on the Internet. When a user visits one of those sites, Google can glean things like the user’s browsing habits, their location and their operating system.
  6. Web Beacons. Google has installed many 1 pixel by 1 pixel .gifs into many checkout screens. This invisible image file can also take information from a user’s computer to Google.

How URL Shorteners can Help Online Marketing and Promotion Campaigns

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

If you’ve been following just about anyone on Twitter as part of your online marketing and promotion research, you’ve probably seen a TinyURL link. It’s the URL shortening Website that’s likely the most successful service to piggyback onto Twitter’s success.

tinyurlSo what is it, really? TinyURL is a Website that shortens URLs. That’s it. Say you want to send a blog post or a news story to someone on Facebook, or you want to tweet it on your online marketing and promotion Twitter account. The problem is, those social media sites don’t allow HTML tags, so you would have to simply copy and paste the whole URL. It may look something like:

http://www.organicsemseo.com/2009/05/22/twitter-for-business-what-you-need-to-know-to-get-started/

If you don’t want to count, that’s 98 characters. If you’re posting it on Twitter, that leaves you with only 42 characters to explain the link. And even if you’re posting to Facebook or another place for your online marketing and promotion campaign where message length isn’t as important, the link remains unwieldy and well, ugly.

TinyURL solves those online marketing and promotion problems by condensing that URL into—you guessed it—a tinier one. It will look something like this: http://tinyurl.com/ozkb2p.

And that’s great. But there’s another function to TinyURL that can be a powerful tool for anyone. By doing a simple Google or Twitter search for that shortened URL, users can see what popular URLs have been passed around and where they’re spreading to. You can track your own online marketing and promotion traffic, or just about any TinyURL traffic.