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Page 1: iCrossing POV: Google Instant

1© ICROSSING. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

GOOGLE INSTANT IS UNVEILED

ICROSSING POV:

GOOGLE INSTANT

On September 8, 2010, Google unveiled an enhancement to its search engine, named “Google Instant” that will

fundamentally shift the way people search. Essentially, Google will now display search results as you type, making it

faster and easier to find what you are looking for. This development is expected to change some behaviors in the way

people search, and also redefine the meaning of an “impression” in search.

There are three main features to Google Instant:

+ Instant Results – results are displayed as you type.

+ Predictive Text – predicts what you are intending to search for. There is no need to finish typing your query –

predictions are shown in grey text.

+ Scroll to Search – Use arrow keys to scroll through predictions – results are updated instantly.

Written by:

Holly Jacobs, Director, Natural Search Reporting, iCrossing

Jon Maxson, Director, Natural Search Optimization, iCrossing

Jason Stinson, Manager, Natural Search Reporting, iCrossing

Reid Spice, Vice President, Search Media Insights, iCrossing

Rob Garner, Senior Strategy Director, iCrossing

Collin Cornwell, Vice President, Natural Search, iCrossing

Google Instant will be available in the U.S. as of September 8, 2010 on Chrome 5/6, Firefox 3, Safari 5 for Mac, and Internet

Explorer v8. Internationally, the initial rollout includes the U.K., France, Italy, Germany, Spain and Russia. Google Instant

functionality is only available to queries performed in the Google Web search box and results pages. Google Instant is

not available via toolbars or built-in browser search bars. Users will be able to turn off this new feature if they choose by

selecting "Instant is on", or "Instant is off" to the right of the search box. By default, Google Instant will be on.

WHERE IS GOOGLE INSTANT AVAILABLE?

Google Instant will make searching much easier and faster than before. Google Suggest became a default feature of

Google in May 2008, when Google began offering suggestions in a drop down menu as the user typed. Google Instant is

expanding on this by serving search results with predictive text. If the user sees an option that more closely matches their

HOW WILL THIS IMPACT THE USER EXPERIENCE?

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ICROSSING POV: GOOGLE INSTANT

2© ICROSSING. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

SEPTEMBER 2010

search intentions, the user can scroll to an alternate suggestion. But now they will see the search results for those terms

automatically update on the page. The additional functionality, like “tab” to accept the predicted phrase and the ability to

type just one letter to bring up an entirely new set of predictions, will help to quickly narrow down the search results as well

as allow the user to view and explore related queries with a key stroke instead of having to type another query. Users have

the option of turning off Instant, though it is set as the default from the home page of Google.com.

Google says there have been no changes to the algorithm, and from what we see, things are identical when comparing the

two. Below you see a "home furnishings" query, one with Instant on and one without Instant – the natural search results

are exactly the same. The only difference was the time to serve the page. We have also begun to notice that paid ads for

major brands are appearing for fragments of search terms, and single letters.

HOW WILL THIS IMPACT SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION AND PAID SEARCH MEDIA EFFORTS?

+ Impact user search behavior. Will users accept Google’s suggestions more quickly now that they see instant results,

and stop refining searches? Or will users see interesting suggestions as an incentive to keep typing until a longer-tail

suggestion matches their intent?

+ Benefit big brands that appear in broad suggested queries as searchers first start typing. Expect these top brands

to at least increase impression volume, if not actual click-throughs from exploring searchers. Brands that tend to

already be high traffic destinations, or viewed in a user’s personalization profile will benefit from upstream letter

searches, such as single letters of the alphabet, and some two-letter combinations. There is no specific way to

"optimize" for this type of search. Major brand and online destinations such as Best Buy, Facebook, Hotmail, and

Walmart are receiving the benefit of first letter visibility.

+ Increase impression and click volumes for certain terms. iCrossing has observed that paid ads are appearing on

single letter terms for major brands, and this may increase clicks for these respective companies. For example, ads for

Walmart.com are appearing for the letter ‘W,’ Amazon.com ads are appearing for the letter ‘A,’ and so on. This could

potentially deliver ads on terms with little or no relevancy, and also potentially impact impression counts and CTR.

With regard to SEO and paid search media, Google Instant does:

SERP with Google Instant SERP without Google Instant

Page 3: iCrossing POV: Google Instant

SEPTEMBER 2010

3© ICROSSING. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

ICROSSING POV: GOOGLE INSTANT

+ Raise more questions about the future accuracy of Google search volume numbers, and the impression numbers

in Google Webmaster Tools. Will partially-entered user queries count, or will the suggested term get the credit?

Shortly after the September 8 demo, Google released an "Impact of Search Queries Post" admitting that impression

numbers will be inflated. There has also been recent "unrelated" news about Google updating their Keyword Tool,

however the question still remains. During the process of developing Instant, Google also reevaluated its definition of

an "impression." Google states that, in Google Instant, an impression occurs when:

— The user begins to type a query on Google and clicks anywhere on the page (a search result, an ad, a spell

correction, a related search)

— The user chooses a particular query by clicking the Search button, pressing Enter, or selecting one of the

predicted queries

— The user stops typing, and the results are displayed for a minimum of three seconds

+ Position aggressive content creators for improved performance. Google Suggest has long been a good driver of

ideas for content creation and optimization. Site owners who create new content based on search demand are now

likely to reap benefits from that content’s "instant" exposure to searchers as they refine their queries. Ranking on the

first page of results may be more important than ever before.

+ Mimic content delivery in other social spaces. Rather than being limited to strict intent-based returns, the "results

before you type" aspect is similar to the ambient information discovery that happens in social streams such as

Twitter, Facebook, or even Foursquare. The result is that a once intent-based medium (search) now has an ambient

discovery feel, not unlike the way information is delivered and digested in formal social spaces as well as dynamic

AJAX type interfaces.

+ Change the natural search ranking algorithm. The same core natural search strategies should still be employed to

achieve top visibility.

+ Change the effects of personalization/localization. Your suggested results may be different than those of someone

next door or across the country, just as search results have been personalized and localized in the past based on

several factors.

+ Affect data sent in the referrer string to your analytics. Preliminary testing indicates that you can discern both the

‘partial word’ a user typed as well as the full ‘suggested’ keyword that drove the result set displayed. The exact

position your site ranked in the search results is also still passed with the "cd=" parameter.

On the other hand, Google Instant does not:

iCrossing expects that this latest innovation from Google will greatly speed up the process of searching, and that we will

continue to closely monitor the impact to both paid and natural search campaigns for any spikes or declines in traffic, CTR,

CPC, and other key metrics. Many big brands may have gains from results appearing on newly suggested terms, but it

remains to be seen whether or not this traffic positively converts to various metrics and goals.

For more insight into the impact of Google Instant, visit the iCrossing Great Finds blog and read, "Google Suggest Evolves

Into Google Instant," by Reid Spice, vice president of search media insights at iCrossing.

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