Saturday, May 30, 2015

Watch out! Twitter, Snapchat fall victim to quirky iOS bug

With a simple string of offending characters, a prankster can crash your iOS device via Snapchat or Twitter.

If you've been on the lookout for pranksters crashing your iOS device through text, you now will need to look in other places.


An iOS bug surfaced earlier this week that crashes a device running Apple's mobile operating system whenever a string of characters in non-Latin script, including Arabic or Chinese, is sent via text message and received in a notification window. Now Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at F-Secure, a Finland-based security company, has shown that the same flaw can be exploited via messages sent through social networking services Twitter and Snapchat, the Guardian is reporting.

Luckily for users, the latest bug isn't one that will have a lasting impact. For one, the issue requires that the sender know the string that would cause the device to crash. What's more, users could easily protect themselves from the problem by simply turning off notifications.

According to Hypponen, when a user sends a message through Twitter or Snapchat containing the offending characters, the iOS device can, just as it does when the same string is sent via standard text message, crash the gadget. However, in order for the bug to be exploited, notifications must be turned on and the characters must show up in a pop-up notification on the iOS device. Once the user turns his or her iPhone or iPad back on, it's possible to continue using Twitter and Snapchat without interruption.

According to AppleInsider, the Unicode characters that attempt to render on the screen eat up too many resources, causing a device like the iPhone to crash. The key ingredient in that scenario is notifications. If the text message is viewed in the Apple iMessage conversation string, the device won't crash; the issue only occurs when a notification pops up on the user's screen showing the characters. When notifications are turned off for Snapchat and Twitter, the string won't cause the device to crash.

The bug is just the latest in a long line of bugs that have impacted Apple's iOS 8. Since its launch last September, Apple's latest mobile operating system has been patched several times. In its first five months of availability, Apple released six rounds of bug fixes to its flagship mobile platform.

For its part, Apple acknowledged the issue in a posting on its support pages on Thursday. The company said that affected users could rely on its virtual personal assistant Siri to "read unread messages" and ask her to respond to the "malicious message." Once that reply has been sent, users can simply open iMessage and delete the conversation with the offending text.

So far, Apple hasn't responded to the issue in Twitter and Snapchat, but it did say in its support page announcement that it will "make a fix available in a software update." It's likely that the software update, which has not been given a release date, will stop the issue from occurring in Snapchat and Twitter.

Apple, Twitter and Snapchat did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



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Google's Project Vault is a security system disguised as a microSD card

The search giant's new project aims to make phones more secure by loading a microSD card that serves as a security powerhouse.

SAN FRANCISCO -- Google wants to make your phone more secure, without having to change the way manufacturers make smartphones.

The company on Friday announced Project Vault, which packs a digital security system into a microSD card, which phones and computers usually recognize as a storage device. The company unveiled the service during Google's I/O developer conference here.

"Project Vault is your digital mobile safe," said Regina Dugan, who leads Google's Advanced Technology and Projects group, or ATAP, which oversees the project. "Big security, small package."

The Vault card is essentially a secure computer that protects the personal information of a phone's owner. For example, it can encrypt, or scramble, chat messages from an app and provide extra levels of authentication, so your device knows that you are you. The card itself has a near-field communication, or NFC, chip for communicating with nearby devices and has 4 gigabytes of storage. It can be recognized by any OS -- including Google's Android software, Windows, and Apple's OS X -- but all the software is being run off the microSD card.

Google will first develop the technology for enterprise companies. The idea is that if it meets the high bar of big companies, it will meet the standards of consumers as well.

Both Web and mobile security are becoming increasingly vulnerable at a time when more and more consumers' financial and other sensitive data is being stored in smartphone apps and online services. Hackers have conducted high-profile attacks on retailers like Target and have pilfered databases in the health care and financial industries, gleaning medical records, Social Security numbers and credit and bank info. And thanks to the leaks from whistleblower Edward Snowden, we now know the extent to which communications and online activity are activity monitored and stored by way of government surveillance.

The development of secure ways to communicate and store data is a priority for Google as more users flock to its free services like the Gmail email service, Chrome Web browser and Google Maps, all of which share data with Google to better inform its advertising products.

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In shadow of Android Pay, Google Wallet evolves to stay alive

Remember Google Wallet?

With all the fanfare surrounding Google's new digital payments system, Android Pay, it's easy to ignore the fact that Google already launched a different payments system -- four years ago -- called Google Wallet.

That earlier service was unceremoniously snubbed during the Google I/O developer conference Thursday, without any references to it during the Android Pay announcement at the event's keynote presentation.

The slight is another reminder of Google Wallet's long-time struggles to reach wider acceptance as a mobile payments system and an example of what can happen if a technology arrives too early to matter to consumers and businesses. But Google has quietly shifted gears on Wallet in a way that may keep it alive.

The world's largest online search company now plans to reintroduce Google Wallet as an app that friends can use to transfer small payments -- the digital equivalent to writing a check -- available on both the Android and iOS operating systems.

The change may help breathe new life into Google Wallet, which never really took off with customers or retailers. It will also allow Google to differentiate the two mobile payment systems, since, right now, both Google Wallet and Android Pay would both share many of the same features, including the ability for users to make in-store payments with their smartphones and make purchases within mobile apps.

A key difference between them is that Android Pay -- unlike Google Wallet -- is an open platform that can be used to power third-party payment or loyalty-card apps created by banks or retailers, according to Vijay Koduri, an executive at payments processor Adyen and a former Google executive who helped launch Google Wallet. That should allow Android Pay, which will launch later this year, to worm itself more into the mobile-payments world.

Google Wallet debuted four years ago as an early player in mobile payments -- the concept of letting people make secure online and in-store payments right from their smartphones. The service, along with other mobile-payments operators, may have been ahead of its time, as Google struggled to find carriers, device makers and retailers to support the new technology.

 Year after year, the tech industry predicted mobile payments would take off and people would start using their phones instead of their wallet. Yet year after year, consumer adoption failed to materialize, as the infrastructure to make the payments didn't exist and -- even when it did -- consumers had little motivation to use something that wasn't cash or plastic.

"You need to give me a really good reason to move from something when what I have works for me," said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst at Kantar Worldpanel, describing one of the many challenges Google Wallet has faced.

Osama Bedier, who helped run Google's payments business and is now CEO of payment-terminals startup Poynt, said Google Wallet had a hard time building up partners, with its plans to work with wireless carriers falling apart after those companies pursued their own service.

That would be Isis, a joint venture started by Verizon Wireless, AT&T and T-Mobile, a similar mobile payments service that was later re-branded Softcard to distance itself from the terrorist group. In February, Google acquired Softcard's technology, and shut the service down in March.

Even without the carriers, it was a challenge convincing both consumers and retailers to buy into the new system, Bedier said.

Despite the rocky start, momentum in the field jump-started after Apple -- years late to the mobile payments space -- last year said it would enable its new iPhones with the technology needed to make payments at point-of-sale terminals. About 72 hours after Apple Pay's October debut, over 1 million credit cards had been activated on the service, more than other, similar services combined.

Now Google's mobile payment efforts look to be on much better footing, thanks to the spread of new terminals that can accept mobile payments as well as the momentum from Apple Pay encouraging more use of the technology. Even so, mobile payments services are still struggling to gain adoption and haven't reached mainstream use.

"Apple is making good traction, but it's not great, with Apple Pay," Bedier said.

Apple, for its part, has boasted that Apple Pay makes up $2 out of every $3 spent on purchases using contactless payment systems, which cover any device, including smart cards, that make payments wirelessly. Apple CEO Tim Cook has said 2015 "will be the year of Apple Pay."

Despite a more favorable landscape, Google opted not to update Google Wallet but instead come out with a new brand, Android Pay. The new service emerges just months after Samsung rolled out its similarly named (and functioning) mobile payments system, Samsung Pay.

Kantar's Milanesi said it was possible the Google Wallet name simply wasn't new enough to inspire more user interest, after sitting around for four years with little use, so it made sense to go with a different name.

"Coming up with new features under the same name," she said, "would've been a harder sell."

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Virtually there: How Google is readying VR for you

Google has an ambitious plan for the future: help nearly anyone with a smartphone to experience virtual reality.



The technology industry is preparing for an onslaught of new devices that mount on your head, immersing you in computer-generated worlds ranging from space battles to Spanish villas.

The trend is called virtual reality, or VR, and the technology is moving from science fiction to store shelves within the next year. Once thought of as a gimmick from the early '90s, VR is now one of the hottest markets in the tech industry as low-cost components and powerful software have made replicating the real world easier and more lifelike.

As it happens, some of the biggest companies in the world are staking out a position offering the highest-quality devices, capable of displaying complex imagery and inserting users in a digitally created world that feels like our own.

Google? It wants to help everyone else.

The search giant will do this with a product called Cardboard, a simple device made from Velcro, a button, some lenses and folded cardboard. The project was first announced at the company's I/O developer conference last year, but Google returned to this year's show with an updated version that works with devices whose screens measure up to six inches diagonally. Google also showed off a new version of its Cardboard smartphone app. Perhaps the biggest change: Cardboard and its apps will work with the iPhone, in addition to Android devices.

The takeaway: Cardboard may sound cheap, but it's a powerful play for getting VR out to everyone and their mother.

VR for the masses

All told, the device costs less than $20, a fraction of the $350 or more that most high-end headsets are expected to command. The trick: Your smartphone is both the engine and the display, sliding easily into the front of the contraption and viewable through a pair of off-the-shelf lenses.



For Google, this is business as usual. The search company has made its name by offering technology and software broadly and at little or no cost, inspiring millions of people to flock to its products. It's how the company helped make its Android software for mobile phones the most popular in the world.

 And for the broader industry, Google's Cardboard could be the device that introduces VR to people from rural India to downtown San Francisco, all while companies like Facebook-owned Oculus, Sony, and others design expensive headsets requiring powerful hardware to generate 3D images.

"In many ways what's going on in VR is similar to what happened in mobile seven years ago," said Andrey Doronichev, product manager for VR apps at Google, referring to the earliest days of Android. Google hopes Cardboard will do what low-cost Android smartphones did back then: quickly make technology available to billions of people.

With Cardboard, Google can "introduce an incredible amount of people to VR in a relatively inexpensive way," he said.

Yet critics of Cardboard say it could undermine the industry's attempts to attract the broader public. Since the last major attempts to sell VR almost two decades ago, enthusiasts have warned against overhyping the technology and selling it before it's ready.

The fear is that if VR isn't a great experience the first time someone tries it out, it may poison public perception.

Doronichev thinks that while the experience is an obvious downgrade from wearing an expensive VR headset powered by a PC or game console, the overall impression is comparable.

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App Indexing: Why It Matters For The Future Of Search

Following Google announcement, SEOs and webmasters focused on getting their websites “mobile friendly” by the April 21st deadline. Yet “more mobile-friendly websites in search results” was only half of Google’s announcement. The other half was this: “More relevant app content in search results.”



What exactly is app indexing? Why is it important? Should SEOs and marketers even care, especially if they don’t sell an Android app?

You’re about to find out. In today’s mobile search climate, app indexing signals a shift in the direction of search, and marketers need to pay attention.

What Is App Indexing?

According to Google, “App Indexing lets Google index apps just like websites. Deep links to your Android app appear in Google Search results, letting users get to your native mobile experience quickly, landing exactly on the right content within your app.”

What does this mean in practical terms?

If you perform a Google search on a mobile device, the search results will include not just web pages, but also relevant content that is within an app.

Let’s say you’re on a mobile device doing a Google search. The most relevant content for your movie query is located in the IMDb app. In addition to surfacing a link to the IMDb website, Google will show you an IMDb app result, like this:



Is Search App Indexing New?

Not really. Google introduced App Indexing back in October 2013. The idea was simple: By enabling deep linking within their apps, webmasters could allow Googlebot to index app content just like web page content. That way, Android users with your app installed would have the option to go directly to your app content from within Google search results (as shown above).

Though it isn’t new, there have been several major developments in app indexing capabilities since it was initially announced. For example, Google has expanded app indexing to include results from apps that are not installed on your phone (thereby assisting users with app discovery). And, just this week, the search giant announced that it would soon be bringing app indexing to iOS devices as well.

Bing Does It, Too

Google doesn’t have a leg up on the competition as far as this particular technology is concerned. Bing allows Windows phone users to access app content in search results, too.

What’s the biggest difference? Sheer numbers. Bing has a marginal share of global search, paralleled by a marginal share of the smartphone market.



Why Does This Even Matter?

So, let’s get down to the big question: Does this matter?

Yes. The fact of the matter is that mobile search now includes app results — and their inclusion in these search results only seems to be growing.

I think that this signals a more important trend in the evolution of mobile search. The indexing net is ever expanding. Could it be that, with the rise of wearable technology, Google can index even more information in algorithmic search results (e.g., location, health status, heart rate)? How will this information be available?

There are plenty of questions that surround the issue:

What else will be indexed in the future?

How will this affect the search results for businesses that do not have Android (and soon, iOS) apps?

Will creating an app enhance a business’s search presence?

How will this drive mobile usage upward? Obviously, Google doesn’t index the apps on my desktop.

If it’s doing it for mobile, how will this shift overall usage in favor of mobile devices?
A few things are certain.

This improves the search experience for mobile users. App indexing signals the a broadening of search potential. The more content that is indexed, the greater the user’s search experience and results.

Google drives higher engagement with apps. As Google’s indexing page explains, “App Indexing helps you drive usage of your app through Google. Deep links to your app appear in Google Search results on Android so users can get to your native mobile experience quickly and easily.”

Google remains in control. GigaOM explains that the expansion of in-app search will also help Google sell more ads and hold down the competition.

What Should You Do?

There are two main takeaways. The first is tactical. The second is strategic.

Get your app indexed. If your business has an Android app, you need it to be indexed. There are plenty of ways to find out how to do this. The best source that I’ve found with step-by-step instructions is found in the Codelabs.

Note: App indexing technology isn’t widely available to iOS app developers yet, but Google has outlined some first steps you can take to prepare here.

Grow your mobile presence. On a strategic front, mobile should become the new obsession for marketers and technology workers, regardless of their specific function.

Conversion specialists should be tuned into the conversion optimization potential for mobile. SEOs must identify the areas where mobile results can be improved. CTOs must strategize new ways to gain traction among mobile users. Developers must identify touch points between mobile apps and sites.

At a minimum level, keep mobile front and center in your thinking. Mobile is the present and future of marketing.

Conclusion

Clearly, app indexing is s step forward in the dominance of mobile search and mobile usage.

SEOs, developers, webmasters, and marketers need to know this. More importantly, they need to understand that mobile search and marketing is not a static industry. It is in motion. We are moving towards a bigger mobile universe, an expansion of indexation potential, and a greater need to optimize mobile in every way possible.

Mobile app development

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Friday, May 29, 2015

Structured Data & The SERPs: What Google’s Patents Tell Us About Ranking In Universal Search

Columnist Barbara Starr delves into several Google patents to explore the ways in which the search giant is displaying search results based on structured data and context.


The use of structured data is now increasingly apparent in many aspects of search — but perhaps nowhere is it more evident than in today’s search engine results pages.

Search engine results pages have evolved considerably over the years. We’ve seen a shift from the classic “10 blue links” to an information-rich display that blends many different types of results. In addition to the standard organic search results we all know and love, we’re also seeing knowledge panels, image results, local packs, Google news, and more — each of which has its own unique algorithm for determining placement within these areas.

Google’s shift towards these “blended” search results that include Knowledge Graph-based information has had a marked effect on the search engine optimization (SEO) community. Not only do we need to start incorporating structured data into our SEO strategies, but we need to have an understanding of what factors determine which content gets displayed in different areas of the search engine results pages.

Today, I’m going to delve into some Google patents to help give you a better understanding of how the search giant is thinking about the display of search results based on structured data and context.

Ranking & Ordering Via Entity Metrics

A recent patent of Google’s, “Ranking search results based on entity metrics,” discusses the ways in certain metrics might be used by a search system (e.g. Google Search) to rank and order results.

The patent starts out by describing how a search engine algorithm works: It looks at a variety of metrics (what we typically refer to as “ranking factors”), then computes a relevance score based on a weighted sum of these metrics to determine placement within search results.


The patent also notes that “ranking search results may be distinct from ordering search results for presentation.” In other words, ranking is an internal measurement based on relevancy, whereas ordering refers to how search results are presented on a page.

So, what does this have to do with structured and entity search?

Well, the patent then goes on to describe how, in some instances, search results are based on information found within “data structures.”

In other words, information from various external data sources (such as Wikidata, a repository of structured data that helps to power Google’s Knowledge Graph) as well as structured data within your website could be used to determine search engine results page placement.

Entity-specific metrics might be used to enhance and refine this ranking/ordering process. In particular, the patent discusses four entity metrics: a relatedness metric, a notable entity type metric, a contribution metrics, and a prize metric. (Note: The patent also indicates that these 4 metrics are illustrative examples, meaning that others may also potentially be used.)

The four illustrative entity metrics are described as follows:

1. Relatedness Metric 

The relatedness metric looks at the co-occurrence of an entity and its “entity type” on web pages. An “entity type” is generally a categorization or defining characteristic of an entity — for example, George Washington is an entity, of the entity type “US Presidents.”



In other words, when you type in a search query, Google may determine that a web page is more or less related to that query based on what other, related words are included on the page.

2. Notable Entity Type Metric

The notable entity type metric refers to the fact that an entity may be categorized under many different entity types, some of which are more “notable” than others — for example, Barack Obama could be categorized as an Author, Politician, Public Speaker and Celebrity, but he is most notable for being a U.S. President.

The notable entity type metric also takes into account that multiple entities can be of the same entity type, so one in particular may be the most relevant to a searcher. For example, both George Washington and Barack Obama are of the entity type U.S. Presidents — but a Google search for “us president” yields a direct answer containing Barack Obama.

3. Contribution Metric (And Fame Metric)

It is no surprise that Google may have discovered the power and potential of something like a contribution metric and then applied that to other domains leveraging context. These are a couple of other interesting tidbits regarding reviews that the patent provides which are stated as follows:

“[I]nformation for determining a contribution metric may include social media, news sources, research publications, books, magazines, professional and user reviews on commerce websites, e.g. Amazon product reviews, professional and user reviews on dedicated reviewing sites, e.g. restaurant reviews on Yelp, user reviews on industry or domain specific sites, e.g. movie reviews on IMDB, any other suitable source of information, or any combination thereof.”


“[T]he search system may combine professional critic reviews and user reviews of restaurants, giving more weight to the professional reviews and less weight to the user reviews.”
The Fame Metric

A sub-metric of the contribution metric, the fame metric takes into account all the contributions of a particular entity. “For example, the fame metric of a movie actor may include a summation of the contribution metrics of that actor’s movies.”

Check out the search engine results page below for actor Tom Hanks. You can see below that the “contributions” involved in calculating this fame metric (in this case, his movies) are displayed prominently in the Knowledge Graph Panel in its own dedicated area, as mapped to the knowledge panel template in Google’s patent, “Providing Knowledge Panels With Search Results.”

4. Prize Metric

The patent provides strong evidence that semantic web technology is being used as background context for the definitions of the metrics and the environment in which they are framed.

Different Algorithms For Different Screen Areas

There are many interesting elements to the patent, and the last I wanted to address is Figure 3.0 below.

At first glance, it looks very innocuous, like an image of standard search results with a bunch of links. You find those sort of diagrams in many search patents. However it is accompanied by a very intriguing explanation of the figure, part of which reads as follows:

What is interesting here is that it seems that specific regions of the search results are defined or templated in some manner, and ranking/ordering for each varies by context or domain. (Have you noted those fine lines on the screen demarcating or separating results in your search results?) From an SEO point of view, this means that optimizing a company’s website or web presence will be based on targeting these templates, each of which may well have their own ranking algorithm based on context.

As further food for thought, I would like to close with the diagram below, which shows an image from a patent on context, “Maintaining Search Context,” compared to a Google search engine results page for “golden retriever.”

As you can see, different areas of the screen correspond to different result sets for the same query, presumably each with their own distinct algorithm for ranking and ordering information.

Takeaways/Summary

With the increasing shift from keyword search to entity search — and with the increased growth and usage of Knowledge Graph Panels and other data-based displays — comes the corresponding shift in the direction of SEO.

Ordering of items and ranking of information driven by a need for a positive and personalized user experience means that different algorithms apply at different times. These algorithms are based not just on traditional ranking factors that assess relevance and authority, but also by how data may be optimally visually displayed for various device types and screen sizes.

SEO solution

We employ a variety of proven recommended techniques to increase your chance for top rankings.These include optimizing your website's page,content,and structure to drive traffic to your site for specific keyword research.Pixotri technology is a  creative house developing quality web designs, E-Commerce solution. SEO services and Gaming development .

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SearchCap: Google Maps Offline, App Indexing & Structured Data

From Search Engine Land:

*Google Maps Breakthrough: Search And Navigation Without A Connection

Google continues to add features and capabilities that keep its maps that much ahead of the competition. Coming out of I/O yesterday Google made a major announcement: Google Maps search and voice guided, turn-by-turn navigation will be available offline. This is intended for anyone without a data connection or with a weak or inconsistent one. […]

*Structured Data & The SERPs: What Google’s Patents Tell Us About Ranking In Universal Search
Columnist Barbara Starr delves into several Google patents to explore the ways in which the search giant is displaying search results based on structured data and context.

*App Indexing: Why It Matters For The Future Of Search
What is app indexing, and how is it relevant to you? Columnist Neil Patel explains.

*3 Crazy PPC CRO Hacks To Boost Conversion Rates Right Now
Columnist Larry Kim debunks common misconceptions about best practices for paid search ads, then explains what you should be doing instead to really boost your conversion rates.

*Search In Pics: Google Jersey, YouTube & Google Photo Cupcakes & Project Fi SIM
In this week’s Search In Pictures, here are the latest images culled from the web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have, and more.

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

*Facebook Is Finally Displaying GIFs, But Pages Are Still Shut Out

*Do Video Views Matter? CMOs Weigh In On The Video Marketing Metrics That Count

*U.S. E-commerce Retail Sales Hit $261B In 2013, Annual Census Data Shows

*5 Research-Based Findings Show Content Marketing Beats Native Advertising

*An Apple Pay Clone, Google’s Android Pay Will Accelerate The Market

*Mobile Emoji App Helps Abused Kids Express Themselves

*Take The Wheel: 5 Ways To Drive Buyer Behavior With User-Generated Content

 *Google’s Horowitz: “No, Google Plus Is Not Dead.”

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Google Now on Tap Means Local Search Now, SIM Partners

Searching

Emoji Characters Still In Google Search Results, Search Engine Roundtable
How To Stop Hiccups Via Google Answers? Have an Orgasm, Search Engine Roundtable

SEO

*7 Steps to Win at Local SEO, SEMrush Blog

*Google+ Duplicate Pages – How to Delete Them, Site Visibility

*Is Brand a Google Ranking Factor? – Whiteboard Friday, Moz

*The (Not-So-Hidden) Costs of Hiring an Amateur for Your SEO Needs, SEMrush Blog

*The Biggest SEO Fails, stateofdigital.com

SEM / Paid Search

Google AdWords Editor Version 11.1 Released, Search Engine Roundtable
How to Use Google AdWords Labels to Increase Performance & Productivity, The SEM Post
Search Marketing

Video: Google Local Search Bug, iOS Google & Bing App Indexing & Google Now On Tap, Search Engine Roundtable

SEO solution

We employ a variety of proven recommended techniques to increase your chance for top rankings.These include optimizing your website's page,content,and structure to drive traffic to your site for specific keyword research.Pixotri technology is a  creative house developing quality web designs, E-Commerce solution. SEO services and Gaming development .

Contact us for your SEOrequirement.email-info@pixotritechnologies.com. Visit our website:        www.pixotritechnologies.com

3 Crazy PPC CRO Hacks To Boost Conversion Rates Right Now

Columnist Larry Kim debunks common misconceptions about best practices for paid search ads, then explains what you should be doing instead to really boost your conversion rates. 


My dear marketer, I don’t want to be the one to tell you this (actually, I do), but you’ve been led astray. The cold, hard truth about conversion rate optimization (CRO) in PPC just isn’t what you think.


Here it is — are you ready for it?


The truth about PPC ads and conversion is that, on average, most PPC ad copy optimizations have absolutely NO impact on conversion rates.

Blasphemy! I know, this isn’t what you’re conditioned to think. The Ad Text Optimization Fairy Tale goes something like this:

Once upon a time, the diligent little PPC marketer wanted to improve her conversion rates, so she tested various combinations of punctuation, capitalization, etc. She saw a 5% improvement in her conversion rates and lived happily ever after!

It just doesn’t happen that way. You still need to make these tiny changes, and occasionally you may hit the jackpot, but they’ll have little impact for the most part.

Another misconception is that there’s this massive difference in conversion between high click-through rate (CTR) ads and low CTR ads. What’s the actual impact of CTRs on conversion? Check this out:



See how the low CTR ads (<1% CTR) have low conversion? Those ads are terrible and should be shot. Google generally doesn’t even bother running ads with such low CTR, so let’s not focus our attention there.

Now, look at the higher CTR ads (between CTR 2-8%). Notice how the higher CTR ads tend to convert higher than the lower CTR ads, though it’s not a huge difference.

What does this mean?

It means that, while you definitely want ads with high relevance and high CTRs, this isn’t going to double or triple your conversion rates.

Here’s another way you’re being led astray: this magical loophole for bidding yourself into the position you want to boost conversion. You have to bid higher to get a higher position, because they convert better, right?

Wrong.



In truth, ads in different positions convert at about the same rate. A higher ad position may bring you more clicks and even more conversions overall, sure. But a higher ad position won’t inherently improve your actual rate of conversion — and those clicks in the higher position are going to be more expensive.

When we’re talking about improving conversion rates, the small optimizations only bring small results.

So, what should you be focusing on?

Crazy PPC CRO Hack #1: Be Different

One of the easiest ways to see big changes is to differentiate your ads from your competitors’ ads. Sounds simple, yet most advertisers suck at this!

Think about what you see for most queries. It’s a total snoozefest. Everyone’s using the same keywords, the same offers. The ads all look the same, so they’re really just fighting for position and hoping to soak up the most (more expensive) clicks.



AdWords Jackpots! But, unlike in Las Vegas, this kind of jackpot doesn’t win you any money — though avoiding one might. When everyone else is doing the same thing, there’s a real opportunity for you to stand out in a big way by being different.

How do you do it?

Create click-bait ads with emotional triggers that showcase your unique selling proposition. Perry Marshall is an expert at this and uses what he calls the Swiss Army Knife method of copywriting to find just the right trigger that converts like crazy. Here’s an example of an ad that converts at three times the average conversion rate for “divorce lawyers.”



Crazy PPC CRO Hack #2: Leverage Ad Formats That Convert Like Crazy

The best way to improve your PPC conversion rate is to leverage new ad innovations that actually bias people towards converting prior to clicking on your ads. How do you do it? Here are four things you can do today to create higher converting PPC ads:

Use Shopping Ads. If you’re doing anything related to e-commerce, use these! Shopping Ads steal conversions from all other organic and paid results; the images steal two thirds of the clicks. Price and image information are infused in the searcher’s mind before they even click on the ad, so you’re less likely to get “curious” clicks — and the commercial intent of the clicks you do pay for is way greater.

Use Ad Customizers. It’s not good enough to just tell people they need to buy from you — you need to explain why they need to buy from you now. Ad Customizers help you tap into marketing psychology by infusing a sense of urgency and triggering the “fear of missing out” in your searchers with countdowns on sales, limited product availability, etc. You can do perpetual sales, which basically means a sale that never actually ends but always creates that sense of urgency.

Keyword Selection. The nature and intent of the keywords you’re targeting is critical. Keywords are generally classified as navigational, informational, or transactional. You have your branded keywords (like “J Crew” or “Home Depot”) that are navigational, meaning searchers are looking for a particular website. Then you have your informational keywords, which indicate that the searcher is trying to learn something. Transactional keywords have high commercial intent, meaning they are used by people who are ready to buy. The top PPC accounts heavily weight their keyword selection to these super high commercial keywords.

Get Rid of Keyword Clutter. Keyword clutter is the natural result of testing continuously but never getting rid of the keywords that just aren’t working. You no longer need to keep every plural, misspelling, alternate spelling, etc. Get rid of the keyword clutter and simplify your AdWords account so you can focus on the keywords that really convert and spot the opportunities. Disclaimer: This won’t directly impact your conversion rates — it’s just a pet peeve of mine!

Crazy PPC CRO Hack #3: Use Remarketing As A Conversion Rate Optimization Tool
A lot of PPC marketers don’t consider remarketing to be a CRO tool, which is pretty crazy considering it can help you reconnect with and convert the site visitors who leave without converting (which is a vast majority of them).

Even people engaged and committed enough to put items in a cart can bounce — in fact, approximately 70% of shoppers will abandon their cart. Remarketing is an opportunity to turn those abandoners back into leads and make a second (or third, or tenth, or twentieth) impression.



You can do remarketing on Facebook and Twitter now, too, even using your own customer lists. Of course, the Google Display Network is prime remarketing ground as well, as it reaches 92% of all internet users in the US.

How can you make your remarketing campaigns more effective? Don’t be afraid to be super aggressive. Conversion rates actually increase over time with remarketing ads, as shown here:

Remarketing lists for search ads (RLSA) are another easy hack to double your conversion rates. On average, they have higher click-through rates and lower cost-per-click (CPC) than regular search ads. Just be careful to set up your RLSA campaigns in such a way that it’s not merely “stealing” conversions from your existing campaigns.

3 Steps To High Converting PPC Marketing Campaigns

Want to learn more? I know you do. Check out this information-packed webinar I hosted with the inimitable Oli Gardner from Unbounce, where we show marketers how to:

Choose the right keywords for your business.
Create ads that compel searchers to click.
Send traffic to landing pages that actually convert.

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AdWords Dimensions Tab Now Features Both Ad Group & Campaign Detail Reports

Quickly assess settings and performance across campaigns and ad groups.


The AdWords Dimensions tab is the tab that keeps on giving. In addition to last month’s roll out of campaign details, Google has now added ad group details to the tab.

The reports allow you to quickly review setting and performance details across a set of campaigns and ad groups. Choose the ad group details report to sort and filter by metric, label, campaign type and more. Quickly see things like the number of active or disapproved keywords, negatives, which ad groups have sitelinks enabled or disapproved, as well as mobile bid adjustments and more.

The reports can be downloaded like any other report in AdWords.

Just go to the dimensions tab and at the bottom you’ll find Campaign details and Ad group details.

AdWords also recently streamlined the Top Movers report with a summary dashboard at the top of the and details on top mover campaigns and ad groups below.

SEO solution

We employ a variety of proven recommended techniques to increase your chance for top rankings.These include optimizing your website's page,content,and structure to drive traffic to your site for specific keyword research.Pixotri technology is a  creative house developing quality web designs, E-Commerce solution. SEO services and Gaming development .

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Google Maps Breakthrough: Search And Navigation Without A Connection

Offline functionality coming later this year and to iOS too.

Google continues to add features and capabilities that keep its maps that much ahead of the competition. Coming out of I/O yesterday Google made a major announcement: Google Maps search and voice guided, turn-by-turn navigation will be available offline.

This is intended for anyone without a data connection or with a weak or inconsistent one. So it will be great for travelers who don’t want to pay international data charges or don’t want to get a local SIM card. But more importantly it’s for developing markets and places in the world where data connections are unreliable.

Offline turn by turn directions will rely on GPS. And while there have previously been offline digital maps, including a modest prior effort by Google and a more extensive one by Nokia, this is a breakthrough. That’s partly because of its scope and the fact that it doesn’t require the user to download the map or a section of the map onto the phone.

Google said during the keynote that offline maps will be available “later this year.” The company also told me this morning in email that the offline functionality will equally be coming to Google Maps for iOS.

Below is the full keynote video from yesterday. The discussion of offline Google Maps functionality starts at 2:11:47.

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Microsoft Now Allegedly Set To Release Surface Pro 4 in July: Is Apple Running Scared?

There have been so many back and forth rumors about when the Surface Pro 4 will be officially released that it’s hard to keep count. However, several sites are now claiming that it will be released in July, the same time Windows 10 will be released. Here is what Master Herald has to say.


“Now that May is almost over, it is unlikely that Microsoft would still pull off a surprise and launch the Surface Pro 4. It is thus very likely that Microsoft would be launching the latest iteration to its hybrid device in July, which happens to be the same month that the company will be launching its Window 10 desktop and mobile operating system.”

Vine Report insists that the Surface Pro 4 will have an Intel Core M Broadwell chip, ditching the original plan to ship it with the more powerful Intel Core i5 or even the Intel Core i7 processors. Several people on the internet have cast doubt about this rumor, which appears to be part of the internet echo chamber without any actual confirmation.

According to BGR, the Surface Pro 4 will get rid of the fan like the new MacBook, but they don’t think that automatically means it will pack a slower Intel Core M processor. They also believe that that the Surface Pro 4 is expected to feature a 12-inch display with 2160 x 1440 pixels of resolution, which is the same as the Surface Pro 3. However, other sources claim the Surface Pro 4 will have a 4K screen.

The Surface Pro’s main competitor with be the iPad Pro, which doesn’t have a specific release date. According to some sources, the iPad Pro will have a 13-inch screen and run a variant of Apple’s current OS X operating system. It will also have a pressure-sensitive stylus. MacRumors believes the device will be released in late 2015 and compared it to previous iPads.

“While rumors on the larger iPad are somewhat scarce, it’s believed the tablet will closely resemble the iPad Air 2 and the iPad mini 3, offering a thin chassis and slim bezels.”

The article also notes that iPad Pro may measure 7mm and it could include several iPad Air 2 features like 2GB of RAM and Touch ID. Even though MacRumors is the best when it comes to rumor accuracy, they seem to be basing their assumptions on other reports as well.

The release of both Microsoft’s Surface Pro 4 and Apple’s iPad Pro should really give the tablet industry a desperately needed kick. Microsoft’s Surface Pro 3 was a groundbreaking laptop/tablet hybrid and it has not only influenced Microsoft to expand on its flagship tablet, but other companies as well.


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Microsoft to Clear the Windows Store Clutter

Ever go to the Windows Store looking for a particular app and find dozens of options, all of which pretty much do the exact same thing? It's a common problem for app stores, but Microsoft is now looking to remedy it for Windows users.

The tech giant on Wednesday announced a new effort aimed at eliminating app clutter and ensuring all apps are appropriately priced and clearly labeled — so you can find what you're looking for faster and easier. As part of the effort, Microsoft has introduced a stricter app certification policy for new and existing apps to help cut down on the bloat.

"These changes will help customers more rapidly find the apps they are specifically seeking," Microsoft's Bernardo Zamora wrote in a blog post. "We will identify apps that are not following the policies, informing developers of issues we locate, and removing apps that don't comply."

Zamora admitted that many apps in the Windows Store have similar icons and titles, which can be confusing to users. Other apps have icons and titles that don't even match their content. That's about to change.

Going forward, Microsoft plans to remove any apps that "can't be distinguished from other apps in the Store, have icons or titles that are too similar to other apps already in the Store, or don't properly represent the functionality of the app," Zamora wrote.


The company also plans to remove apps that are overpriced. Developers can still set their own prices, but Microsoft said that similar apps should be comparable in price.
"If an app is priced significantly higher than other apps in its category and it is determined that users might be confused and believe (incorrectly) that the higher price is warranted based on superior functionality or value, it may be removed from the Store," Zamora wrote.

Microsoft will also now require informational apps like guides, tutorials, instructional content, and reference materials to be labeled as such. This way, you won't accidentally purchase a game guide when you meant to buy the actual game.

Finally, Microsoft is also cracking down on apps that are not labeled correctly. The company said that developers sometimes use popular and irrelevant keywords to manipulate their app's placement in search results or overall ranking. From now on, apps with inaccurate titles, descriptions, and tags may get the heave-ho.



The changes come after Microsoft last year removed more than 1,500 apps from the Windows Store as part of an effort to crack down on shady, misleading apps.


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