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submits this article by Robert K. McCourty from the Mender (issue 40 - metamends
opt. and marketing newsletter) Microsoft's New Search Engine
I tried out Microsoft's new search engine (beta version) the other day. They
have been working on it quite secretly now for almost a year. It has been
rumored to be a Google killer once in full public release. They say its accuracy
and ability to return relevant results will far surpass any other search engine
on the Internet. That remains to be seen. I tried various combinations of
single, double, and triple word/phrased searches to inspect the results.
To the casual observer I suppose a certain percentage of the results would seem
to be accurate, but upon closer inspection and with a trained eye, the results
for the most part ranged from poor to outright terrible.
I then attempted a series of searches on the same combination of words. "custom
designed screen printed t-shirts" I was attempting to determine how much the
results and rankings changed (or did not change) within the same set of query
words. I searched with a variety of spellings on a particular keyword In this
case, I selected the word "T shirts" then t-shirts (with a dash) and finally "tshirts"
(no dash, all one word)
One web site had very consistent results across all three spelling methods. This
intrigued me so I clicked on the link to analyze the site. i.e. Why was this one
so well optimized or more specifically why did this new Microsoft beta search
engine find this web site so tasty.
The site was completely broken. None of the graphics loaded properly. (in
Internet Explorer) It was devoid of any contextual content on the home page and
scarcely little throughout the rest of the pages. Some scrolling Java script
overlapped the button for a drop down menu. No outside links. Nothing. Excuse
the pun but this was not a pretty site. How then could Microsoft possibly rank
this site one, two and three for completely different keyword phrasings and
spellings on a soon to be major release for a search engine?
The answer revealed itself as soon as I took a look at the web site's HTML
source code.
Guess what folks, meta tags are back! At least as far as the Beta version of
Microsoft's new search engine is concerned, especially the keyword Meta Tag.
Above all, this tag seemed to account for the heaviest weight in determining the
aforementioned rankings. I will err on the side of caution here and assume that
Microsoft has not finalized all their algorithm parameters yet, but the keyword
tag was definitely what their spider had been eating.
The problem However, (beside the horrible site) was that this particular keyword
tag, by all SEO standards, was an abomination! Nearly every rule and guideline
we've come to know and love ALL thrown out the window! It looked like a tag from
1995. Multiple repetition. Too many characters, way too many words, broken
lines, poorly weighted keywords, bad spacing, and completely useless keywords.
What's a "rinsger" anyway?
Have a look for yourself. Here it is. (Without formatting changes)
KEYWORDS CONTENT="tshirts, tees, tee shirts, tee-shirts, printed t-shirts, blank
t-shirts, eshirts, ishirts, short sleeves, sweatshirts, long sleeve, v-necks,
tank tops, jerseys, screenprintings, screen-printings, custom t-shirts, custom
designs, custom printing, custom embroidery, michigan, fraternitys, sororitys,
sportswear, artwork, typesetting, imprints, engraves, emboss, stamps, pocket t�
ts, rinsger ti� ringers, ladie�t� designs,
designing, apparel, clothing, clothes, screens, printers, silkscree embroidery,
embroidered, customs, fraternities, sororities, golf, towels, logos,
promotional, fundraisers, personalized,
company, tailgates, formals, footballs, blocks, carnivals, circus, pledges, bid
day, rush, halloween, christmas, easter, thanksgiving, halloween t-shirts,
christmas t-shirts, easter t-shirts, thanksgiving t-shirts, floors, dormitory,
churches, clubs, sports, sport teams, choirs, schools, businesses, fundraisers,
intramural, hanes, jerseys, fruit of the looms, universities, michigan state
university, MSU, msu, university of michigan, U of M, UofM, u of m, eastern
michigan university, EMU, emu, western michigan university, WMU, wmu, central
michigan university, CMU, cmu, colleges, universitys, universities, shrits,
tshrits, t-shrits, desings, te-shirts, teshirts, sirts, shits, shitts, custums,
screan"
Yup, pretty darn ugly, but the Microsoft Beta search engine seems to be eating
it up. Granted this engine is still in beta version but let's review. Broken,
useless site. Broken useless tags. Number one ranking! What's wrong with this
picture?
Most search engine users will try a new search engine only a few times. When
they do not get the search result accuracy and relevance they expect, they will
soon dismiss it and move along. Beta version or no beta version, one thing is
for certain. The Microsoft coders have plenty of additional work to do before
releasing this search engine to the general public. Google coders, take the
weekend off.
Next Section: A Three Cornered Fight
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