Today Google rolled out
profiles for people to provide personal information to Google that, in turn, is displayed on search results pages for their names. A
post on the Google blog explains away the new feature as a way "to give you greater control over what people find when they search for your name."
Of course, being the vanity searcher that I am, I immediately filled out a profile and here's what shows up at the bottom of page 1 now when you search for "
Aaron Goldman" on Google...
I suspect there's something more in play here than mere SERP control for individuals. Methinks this is Google's first attempt to create a real social network (all apologies to
Orkut). The type of data collected in the profile goes beyond mere identification. It allows people to create a personal portal complete with specified interests. This info will be quite valuable as a targeting mechanism for advertisers. Imagine overlaying keyword queries with profile data?
In the near future, look for a Twitter-line status box to grace the profile pages and maybe even the SERPs in short order. And also the ability to link profiles to friends, co-workers, etc.
By the way, how about Classmates snagging that valuable real-estate? Surprised not to see Twitter there? That, folks, is what we call
leverage.
Update 4/22: Looks like I'm not the only Aaron Goldman that likes to
Google himself. Today I noticed another listing for an Aaron Goldman in Georgia (see screenshot below). Thankfully I got the premium left rail position and the image thumbnail. Wonder why I outranked the other Aaron? Is it because my profile is more complete? Does it have to do with the link-juice I have for the sites listed in my profile? Is there a human element in play here assigning quality score based on looks? :)
2 comments:
Thank you for the heads up on this Aaron. Google may be huge, but they can move quickly into a space.
Yeah, but when that space is filled by a site bigger than facebook in germany (recently launched worldwide) like http://www.yasni.com, they'll have to do better than this
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