Google News asks publishers for 'standout' content

For many publishers, Google News is an important source of traffic. This is particularly true for publishers involved in the business of distributing news.

As a result, it's no surprise that a Google SEO strategy for some publishers focuses heavily on Google News.

For those publishers, a new tag introduced by Google to help publishers surface their best content will be of interest.

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Posted 26 September 2011 13:34pm by Patricio Robles with 5 comments

Want to use a news agency to distribute your story? Try Google News instead

Finding a genuine "scoop" of a story can be SEO gold. It can whizz round the internet gathering links as it goes. However when you have a story that is a little "too hot to handle" you need to careful how you manage it.

Recent events would make you believe that the traditional print media is a bit too cosy with the establishment and that if you want to publish a controversial article which will turn into juicy SEO link bait then the online world is for you.

However, my experience shows this is not necessarily the case and that if you have news which is “too hot to handle” then Google News might be your best bet.

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Posted 29 July 2011 09:15am by Charles Duncombe with 15 comments

Belgian newspapers: Google is boycotting us. Oh wait...

In 2006, a Belgian newspaper group, Copiepresse, sued Google. It claimed that the search engine was violating its copyrights in showing headlines and excerpts from its newspapers in Google News.

Google lost in court, but it may have won a small moral victory when it left those same newspapers crying 'Bloody Mary!' this week. The reason? They noticed that their websites were no longer appearing in Google search results.

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Posted 19 July 2011 14:12pm by Patricio Robles with 1 comment

What does it really take to rank well on Google News?

If you could get your website content syndicated and ranking well on Google News, it would be an awesome way to generate traffic, but how difficult is this?

We decided to explore what it takes to perform well in Google News by starting our own general news site from scratch (it’s a German site at www.noows.de) and it helped us learn a whole lot.

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Posted 17 February 2011 13:02pm by Horst Joepen with 11 comments

Google experiments with a Google News social layer

Few search experts doubt that social media will have some impact on the SERPs in the future, but up until now, it hasn't been very clear that search engines like Google and Bing quite know the best way to integrate social content and signals into their algorithms and UIs.

But if several changes spotted in the wild on Google News results are any indication, they're increasing their rates of experimentation.

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Posted 20 October 2010 09:17am by Patricio Robles with 6 comments

Content sharing and discovery: is Facebook the new Twitter?

Facebook is the world's largest social network. It recently passed the 400m registered user mark and is now the a top five web property according to comScore.

But Facebook is fast becoming more than just the world's largest social network. With 5bn pieces of content being shared every week, and a whopping 60m status updates being post each week, Facebook can no longer be classified as a simple 'social network'.

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Posted 10 February 2010 09:20am by Patricio Robles with 6 comments

Widgetize your website with Google Web Elements

Widgets have become pretty much ubiquitous on the web. Plenty of companies are using widgets as a low-cost distribution strategy: they offer their tools and services in a form that enables users to embed those tools and services into their own websites.

Now Google is getting into the act. It wants to widgetize your blog and website with its products and has launched Google Web Elements to do just that.

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Posted 28 May 2009 09:18am by Patricio Robles with 1 comment

Do Digg and Google News operate whitelists?

I spotted an interesting post on Soshable, which flagged up some data that shows how difficult it is for smaller publishers to break through to the Digg front page.

In the past week, according to data gathered by di66.net, the top ten sources featured on Digg are as follows: The Telegraph, The New York Times, YouTube, Time, Arstechnica, Huffington Post, Washington Post, Cracked, the blessed Daily Mail, and The Guardian. All big-ass publishers.

JD Rucker, who wrote the Soshable post, says Digg needs to diversify, unless it wants to die:When less than 1% of the sites submitted control 46% of the front page, diversity is dead.”

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Posted 19 March 2009 13:40pm by Chris Lake with 0 comments

Ads on Google News

It's the last thing newspapers need. You can almost hear the gnashing of teeth, the hair-pulling, and the calls in to legal.

Not now! Not Google!

But it's true - Google's longstanding policy of no advertising on the Google News site is becoming less policy than loose guideline. As John Battelle so aptly puts it, "sh*tstorm to follow."

Google is now running contextual ads against Google News search results in the United States. Search for "Barack Obama" right about now and you'll see ads for a Barack Obama watch, and a Barack Obama wall plaque. Search "recession" and you get pretty much what you'd expect -- work-at-homes schemes and continuing education programs.

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Posted 26 February 2009 19:47pm by Rebecca Lieb with 5 comments