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Friday, May 11, 2007
Earlier this year, a bunch of Googlers (Maile, Peeyush, Dan, Adam and I) bunged ourselves across
the equator and headed to Sydney, so we could show our users and webmasters that just because
you're "down under" doesn't mean you're under our radar. We had a great time getting to know
folks at our Sydney office, and an even greater time meeting and chatting with all the people
attending Search Summit and
Search Engine Room.
What makes those 12-hour flights worthwhile is getting the chance to inform and be informed
about the issues important to the webmaster community.
One of the questions we heard quite frequently: Should we as webmasters/SEOs/SEMs/users be worried
about personalized search?
Our answer: a resounding NO! Personalized search takes each user's search behavior, and subtly
tunes the search results to better match their interests over time. For a user, this means that
even if you're a lone entomologist in a sea of sports fans, you'll always get the results most
relevant to you for the query "cricket". For the webmaster, it allows niche markets that collide
on the same search terms to disambiguate themselves based on individual user preferences, and
this really presents a tremendous opportunity for visibility. Also, to put things in perspective,
search engines have been moving towards some degree of personalization for years; for example,
providing country/language specific results is already a form of personalization, just at a
coarser granularity. Making it more fine-grained is the logical next step, and helps level the
playing field for smaller niche websites which now have a chance to rank well for users that want
their content the most.
Another question that popped up a lot: I'm moving my site from domain X to Y. How do I make sure
all my hard-earned reputation carries over?
Here are the important bits to think about:
For each page on domain X, have it 301-redirect to the corresponding page on Y. (How? Typically
through .htaccess, but check with your hosting provider).
You might want to stagger the move, and redirect sub-sections of your site over time. This gives
you the chance to keep an eye on the effects, and also gives search engines' crawl/indexing
pipelines time to cover the space of redirected URLs.
https://www.google.com/webmasters is your friend. Keep an eye on it
during the transition to make sure that the redirects are having the effect you want.
Give it time. How quickly the transition is reflected in the results depends on how quickly we
recrawl your site and see those redirects, which depends on a lot of factors including the
current reputation of your site's pages.
Don't forget to update your Sitemap. (You are using
Sitemaps, aren't you?)
If possible, don't substantially change the content of your pages at the same time you make the
move. Otherwise, it will be difficult to tell if ranking changes are due to the change of
content or incorrectly implemented redirects.
Before we sign off, we wanted to shout-out to a couple of the folks at the Sydney office: Lars
(one of the original Google Maps guys) gets accolades from all of us jetlagged migrants for
donating his awesome Italian espresso machine to the office. And Deepak, thanks for all your tips
on what to see and do around Sydney.
Posted by Aaron D'Souza, Software Engineer, Search Quality
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Missing the information I need","missingTheInformationINeed","thumb-down"],["Too complicated / too many steps","tooComplicatedTooManySteps","thumb-down"],["Out of date","outOfDate","thumb-down"],["Samples / code issue","samplesCodeIssue","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],[],[[["\u003cp\u003ePersonalized search refines results based on individual user preferences, benefiting both users and webmasters, particularly those in niche markets.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eWebsite owners migrating domains should implement 301 redirects, stagger the move, monitor the process through Google Webmaster Tools, update their sitemap, and allow time for the transition to be reflected in search results.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eGoogle emphasizes that personalized search is not a cause for concern, as it enhances search relevance and creates opportunities for niche websites.\u003c/p\u003e\n"]]],["Googlers traveled to Sydney to engage with users and webmasters at Search Summit and Search Engine Room. They addressed concerns about personalized search, reassuring that it benefits both users and niche websites by tailoring results. They also provided guidance for webmasters moving sites, emphasizing 301 redirects, staggered transitions, monitoring via Google Webmasters, updating sitemaps, and avoiding simultaneous content changes. They thanked staff members Lars and Deepak for their help.\n"],null,["# Musings on Down Under\n\nFriday, May 11, 2007\n\n\nEarlier this year, a bunch of Googlers (Maile, Peeyush, Dan, Adam and I) bunged ourselves across\nthe equator and headed to Sydney, so we could show our users and webmasters that just because\nyou're \"down under\" doesn't mean you're under our radar. We had a great time getting to know\nfolks at our Sydney office, and an even greater time meeting and chatting with all the people\nattending [Search Summit](https://www.searchsummit.com.au/) and\n[Search Engine Room](https://www.searchengineroom.com.au/).\nWhat makes those 12-hour flights worthwhile is getting the chance to inform and be informed\nabout the issues important to the webmaster community.\n\n\nOne of the questions we heard quite frequently: Should we as webmasters/SEOs/SEMs/users be worried\nabout personalized search?\n\n\nOur answer: a resounding NO! Personalized search takes each user's search behavior, and subtly\ntunes the search results to better match their interests over time. For a user, this means that\neven if you're a lone entomologist in a sea of sports fans, you'll always get the results most\nrelevant to you for the query \"cricket\". For the webmaster, it allows niche markets that collide\non the same search terms to disambiguate themselves based on individual user preferences, and\nthis really presents a tremendous opportunity for visibility. Also, to put things in perspective,\nsearch engines have been moving towards some degree of personalization for years; for example,\nproviding country/language specific results is already a form of personalization, just at a\ncoarser granularity. Making it more fine-grained is the logical next step, and helps level the\nplaying field for smaller niche websites which now have a chance to rank well for users that want\ntheir content the most.\n\n\nAnother question that popped up a lot: I'm moving my site from domain X to Y. How do I make sure\nall my hard-earned reputation carries over?\n\nHere are the important bits to think about:\n\n- For each page on domain X, have it 301-redirect to the corresponding page on Y. (How? Typically through `.htaccess`, but check with your hosting provider).\n- You might want to stagger the move, and redirect sub-sections of your site over time. This gives you the chance to keep an eye on the effects, and also gives search engines' crawl/indexing pipelines time to cover the space of redirected URLs.\n- [https://www.google.com/webmasters](/search) is your friend. Keep an eye on it during the transition to make sure that the redirects are having the effect you want.\n- Give it time. How quickly the transition is reflected in the results depends on how quickly we recrawl your site and see those redirects, which depends on a lot of factors including the current reputation of your site's pages.\n- Don't forget to update your Sitemap. (You are using [Sitemaps](https://www.sitemaps.org/), aren't you?)\n- If possible, don't substantially change the content of your pages at the same time you make the move. Otherwise, it will be difficult to tell if ranking changes are due to the change of content or incorrectly implemented redirects.\n\n\nBefore we sign off, we wanted to shout-out to a couple of the folks at the Sydney office: Lars\n(one of the original Google Maps guys) gets accolades from all of us jetlagged migrants for\ndonating his awesome Italian espresso machine to the office. And Deepak, thanks for all your tips\non what to see and do around Sydney.\n\nPosted by Aaron D'Souza, Software Engineer, Search Quality"]]