Google is the earths busiest librarian in the planets biggest and busiest library. Google's gig is to do one thing and one thing only: find the most suitable publication for her end users.
In order for Google to do her job, she depends on important information from the author of each work as to what the publication is about and what challenge it resolves or what query it answers. Google does not care if the work she advises comes from a large publishing house or an unbiased writer writing in the spare bedroom of her house. Google only cares that the book she advises is the best possible source available to her clients.
After all, if Google makes good suggestions and assists her customers find what they are seeking for, she will become a dependable source of facts and her users will keep coming back.
The facts that Google relies on from the authors to make these suggestions is what I call "Google Clues".
Before you gain knowledge of how to give the librarian hints about your work, imagine if you could get some info into the actual questions users were asking when they came into the library to find your kind of publication.
Imagine if you could snoop on these conversations and you noticed that most people who came in looking for books for new travellers were not in truth asking "Do you have any books for new travellers?" What if you discovered that they were as a matter of fact asking "Do you have any books for people going abroad for the first time?" If you knew that the majority of new travellers were inquiring this question would it transform the kind of "clues" you would prepare for the librarian?
Well thanks to Google, you CAN snoop on these conversations and find out what businesses are actually posing when they type a question or "query" into Google. The terms and sayings people type into the Google search box are preserved in a catalog and used by Google to regularly boost its service. It's like the librarian making a note of every query a customer asks when they come into the library and then interpreting these questions later to gain a more complete understanding of what her potential buyers actually want. This important information is freely available for you to research at http://google.com/sktool
I hope that helps and I hope you're having fun.
In order for Google to do her job, she depends on important information from the author of each work as to what the publication is about and what challenge it resolves or what query it answers. Google does not care if the work she advises comes from a large publishing house or an unbiased writer writing in the spare bedroom of her house. Google only cares that the book she advises is the best possible source available to her clients.
After all, if Google makes good suggestions and assists her customers find what they are seeking for, she will become a dependable source of facts and her users will keep coming back.
The facts that Google relies on from the authors to make these suggestions is what I call "Google Clues".
Before you gain knowledge of how to give the librarian hints about your work, imagine if you could get some info into the actual questions users were asking when they came into the library to find your kind of publication.
Imagine if you could snoop on these conversations and you noticed that most people who came in looking for books for new travellers were not in truth asking "Do you have any books for new travellers?" What if you discovered that they were as a matter of fact asking "Do you have any books for people going abroad for the first time?" If you knew that the majority of new travellers were inquiring this question would it transform the kind of "clues" you would prepare for the librarian?
Well thanks to Google, you CAN snoop on these conversations and find out what businesses are actually posing when they type a question or "query" into Google. The terms and sayings people type into the Google search box are preserved in a catalog and used by Google to regularly boost its service. It's like the librarian making a note of every query a customer asks when they come into the library and then interpreting these questions later to gain a more complete understanding of what her potential buyers actually want. This important information is freely available for you to research at http://google.com/sktool
I hope that helps and I hope you're having fun.
About the Author:
To find out more and a free report about how do I get on Google, go to the get to top of google website.
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