The Joomla! ® Community Magazine

Why You Should be Paying Attention to Google+

Written by | Saturday, 01 September 2012 00:00 | Published in 2012 September
Level of Difficulty:Beginner With the abundance of social networks that spring up on an almost daily basis, you would be forgiven for emitting a dramatic sigh to hear that you need to start paying attention to another social network. But this time, really, you do!

What's the fuss about?

Google+, if you haven't already heard, is the social network which is provided by the search engine giant Google.

On the surface it's 'Just another social network' but when you start to look at the deep integration with other Google products which are gradually being rolled out, alongside the way that Google+ 'Circles' (the containers into which you group your contacts) are influencing the content served up through Google search, it is rapidly becoming a social network that you cannot afford to ignore if you take search engine rankings seriously.

Noise Control

Google+ takes on board many of the concepts which were presented by the crowd-funded Diaspora, such as adding people to Circles (collections of people and pages) based on whatever factors you want to group people by – how you know them, what they do, what they talk about and so forth – as well as having the ability to control the 'noise' that certain people throw at you without removing them entirely from your network (by adding them to a 'Circle' and turning down how much it outputs to your stream), and selectively allowing on a granular basis who can access your shared content.

You can therefore choose who you want to listen to – for example, create a Circle for all Joomla! People and you can just view that stream, rather than distracting photos of cute kitties and the latest baby photos from your friends' sister.

Integration

Google+ also integrates with Google's other systems – Gmail, Calendar, Docs (now known as Drive), and much more, providing tight integration for people who use those services.

A recent announcement for Google Apps Enterprise customers now allows domain administrators to control posts by their users and restrict to domain-only (thereby resolving issues relating to sharing of sensitive content), view all staff profiles and even allow users to create a hangout (very powerful video conferencing allowing collaborative working) automatically whenever a calendar entry is created, or manually with one click in the calendar entry.

Even more clever is that you can now read your Gmail filtered by your Google+ Circles – so if you add people to the Circle you can then quickly find their emails and screen out other content.

Authorship

Google is now using your Google+ profile as a centralised means of identifying the author of content across the internet. That's not only for your content on Google+, but for all your content across the web. Blogs, forum posts, articles, reviews, videos, likes, shares, and so forth.

When you create a Google+ profile you are prompted to add all websites that you contribute to – for example, if you are an author on the Joomla! Community Magazine you could add this as a resource to which you contribute. Perhaps you write a personal blog – add that too! Maybe you also contribute to a corporate blog or have written books on Amazon, another source to add.

You also are able to add all your social profiles, which will be hooked up with your author profile – think Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and so forth.

Providing you have the correct microdata on your websites (this will be covered in a forthcoming article), you will quickly notice your Google+ profile being linked with your articles.

In search results they will begin to show as 'Written by <your Google+ Real Name>' which links to your Google+ profile. In time you'll also see 'More from <your Google+ Real Name>' which links to a filtered Google search, for all content authored by Ruth Cheesley (this currently displays on google.com but not on regional (e.g. google.co.uk) searches).

So what?

Google is building a trust-based network, whereby your social habits and connections inform your search results. If you search for something in Google when you're logged in, results which have been recommended (by '+1' or sharing) by your network (people in your Circles) will begin to be served up above those which haven't – the relevance algorithm won't be ignored completely, but precedence is beginning to be given to resources which people in your network think are useful.

This makes logical sense, in a way. If you were looking for some information about a topic, would you be more likely to trust information which comes from somebody you are already connected with, or a complete stranger (or something a company is paying to put in front of your face)?

For companies ...

Take a step back and consider this from a corporate perspective – if you have a corporate page on Google+ and your potential clients follow your Google+ page, your results are naturally going to start ranking higher for those people. If you have a lot of people following your page, then a lot more people are going to have your links ranking higher. It's important to note, however, that you can't directly 'Circle' people from a page unless they have already 'Circled' your page – so some strategy is called for in order to gain followers.

For individuals...

Consider the implications from the perspective of an author, technical writer, trainer, speaker, one-man-band or any other position whereby building a reputation is important. If you have lots of people in your Circles, they too will be served over time with content you recommend (by sharing or recommending using +1). They will also be able to see when they search for a term which you have a reputation for, how many Circles you are in (hence your general popularity), and at a click see all the content you have contributed. Everything.

So, the question is, can you (and your clients) afford to ignore Google+ any more?

Ruth will be speaking at the Joomla! World Conference on the topic of Google+, Authorship and Microdata. Add her on Google+ here.

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Ruth Cheesley

Ruth Cheesley

Ruth Cheesley runs Virya Technologies and Virya Software and has worked with Joomla! since the fork from Mambo.  She specialises in Joomla! - in particular Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) - and is interested in exploring how open source technology can be implemented in business and education.  Virya means a driving force or energy to do good for the benefit of others, which is the central ethos behind the business.

She's also a field hockey goal keeper, training for ordination in the Triratna Buddhist Order and runs the popular Joomla! User Group Suffolk, as well as being part of the Joomla!Day UK organising team.  Ruth joined the Joomla! Community Leadership Team in 2013.

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Comments (7)

  • avatar
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    Ana Victoria Lagos

    Google Plus no es una red social,Google Plus es donde aprendo de los que más saben!Y eso vale oro!!

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    Michiel Van Kets

    well, a lot of good advice, but so far I'm not seeing a lot of traffic or rankings

    I like google plus, much less clustered than most other options, but its still young, which is why now is the time to get on the train, but to me it doesn't seem clear where it is leading to

    google plus doesn't copy facebook or twitter for that matter, but it seems to be just a very extensive messenger or a news real, but I'm not seeing a lot of people travelling around, everybody seems to be on his own little island, which is fine by my, but the only business advantage I see is to get your site up in google maps, or in local searches, as you can connect those accounts and of course the links you get from your about page, but besides that ... I'm not seeing much market activity going on

    I could be wrong of course :)

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    Ruth Cheesley

    Thanks for taking the time to comment Michiel and I'm sorry I haven't responded sooner, I hadn't noticed your comment.

    Google+ is not necessarily about direct traffic increases - it's about building your reputation and authority on a subject and developing trusted relationships with others. This then allows you to give and receive recommendations to others based upon these trusted relationships.

    The way this is having an effect commercially is that if you have a trusted relationship with someone (e.g. you have them in your Circles and they have you in their Circles), anything you recommend by resharing on G+ or +1'ing will be served up to them with a higher preference to links which have not.

    It takes a little while for the significance of this to sink in .. well, it did for me!

    Of course the other side is being able to quickly filter out stuff you're not interested in - by filtering by circle. It means you can target a question or post directly at people, and has already resulted in be being able to offer advice and receive feedback from the Joomla! community by both listening/responding and actively seeking help.

    Ruth

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    Michiel Van Kets

    hi, thanks for replying.

    sure I get all that, but in order to find people to connect with, in order to build an effective network, there still need to be people active in order to interact with them.

    as long google plus is still relatively small, there's just not that much to be gained

    I agree with the potential benefits, I'm just adding that its still early and sure enough its great to be part of it already, but to really become a significant % of all the channels there are to do business and have people find you; this one is still relatively small and it will take some more time before people should be pushing google plus to the top of their priority list

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    Ruth Cheesley

    Ana: Estoy totalmente de acuerdo! He sido capaz de conectar con una gran cantidad de personas que de otro modo podrían no comunicarse con - incluso si sólo escuchar lo que dicen, me mantiene al día con sus últimas thinkings. Además, creo que el 'qué está de moda' sección realmente útil si soy un poco aburrido! (Perdón por el Traductor de Google!)

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    Dave

    Can it compete with Facebook?

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    Ruth Cheesley

    It isn't a question of competing with Facebook Dave, they are aimed at completely different markets and require a different strategy.

    In terms of the effect on Google search engine results pages and SEO in general, Google+ beats Facebook hands down.

    Ruth