In the search marketing field, the pages the
engines return to fulfill a query are referred to as search
engine results pages (SERPs). Each engine
returns results in a slightly different format and will include vertical
search results (specific content
targeted to a query based on certain triggers in the query, which we’ll illustrate shortly).
Understanding the Layout of Search Results
Pages
Each unique section represents a snippet of
information provided by the engines. Here are the definitions of what each
piece is meant to provide:
Vertical
navigation
Each engine offers the option to search
different verticals, such as images, news, video, or maps. Following these
links will result in a query with a more limited index. for example, you might
be able to see news items about stuffed animals or videos featuring stuffed
animals.
Horizontal
navigation
The search engines also offer other types of
navigation elements. For example, in below figure you can see that Google
offers the option to limit the date range of the content returned in the search
results.
Search
query box
All of the engines show the query you’ve
performed and allow you to edit that query or enter a new query from the search
results page. Next to the search query box, the engines also offer links to the
advanced search page, the features of which we’ll discuss later in the book.
Results
information
This section provides a small amount of meta
information about the results that you’re viewing, including an estimate of the
number of pages relevant to that particular query (these numbers can be, and
frequently are, wildly inaccurate and should be used only as a rough
comparative measure).
PPC
(a.k.a. paid search) advertising
Companies purchase text ads from either Google
AdWords or Microsoft adCenter. The results are ordered by a variety of factors,
including relevance (for which click-through rate, use of searched keywords in
the ad, and relevance of the landing page are factors in Google) and bid amount
(the ads require a maximum bid, which is then compared against other
advertisers’ bids).
Natural/organic/algorithmic
results
These results are pulled from the search
engines’ primary indexes of the Web and ranked in order of relevance and
popularity according to their complex algorithms. This area of the results is
the primary focus of this section of the book.
Query
refinement suggestions
Query refinements are offered by Google, Bing,
and Yahoo!. The goal of these links is to let users search with a more specific
and possibly more relevant query that will satisfy their intent. In March 2009,
Google enhanced the refinements by implementing Orion Technology, based on
technology Google acquired in 2006. The goal of this enhancement is to provide a
wider array of refinement choices. For example, a search on principles
of physics may display refinements
for the Big Bang, angular momentum, quantum physics, and special relativity.
Shopping
search results
All three search engines do this as well.
Shopping results incorporate offers from merchants into the results so that
searchers that are looking to buy something can do so quite easily.
Figure shows the
SERPs in Google for the query stuffed animals.
The various sections outlined in the Google search results
are as follows:
1. Horizontal navigation (see top left)
2. Search query box
3. Results information
4. PPC advertising
5. Vertical navigation
6. Query refinement suggestions
7. Natural/organic/algorithmic results
Even though Yahoo! no longer does its own
crawl of the Web or provides its own search results
information (it sources them from Bing), it
does format the output uniquely. Figure shows
Yahoo!’s results for the same query.
The sections in the Yahoo! results are as follows:
1. Horizontal navigation
2. Search query box
3. Results information
4. Query refinement suggestions
5. Vertical navigation
6. PPC advertising
7. Natural/organic/algorithmic results
Figure shows the layout of the results from Microsoft’s
Bing for the query stuffed
animals.
The sections in Bing’s search results are as follows:
1. Horizontal navigation
2. Search query box
3. Results information
4. Query refinement suggestions
5. Vertical navigation
6. PPC advertising
7. Natural/organic/algorithmic results
8. Shopping search results
Be aware that the SERPs are always changing as
the engines test new formats and layouts.
Thus, the images in Figure 1 through Figure 3 may be accurate for only a few weeks or
months, until Google, Yahoo!, and Microsoft
shift to new formats.
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