Lately, there has been a lot of speculation and out right fear of duplicate content penalties on your organic rankings if a comparison shopping engine is also displaying your content. The idea behind this is that if Google sees your content on let say thefind.com (which has been getting the most heat for this as it has started to surpass the actual merchant site in the search results) will they penalize your actual website and cause you to down rank.

I started searching for answers on this after reading a post on the Y Store Forums. It was not long after that when I found a post from the guys over at Solid Cactus on the FeedPerfect Blog. The blog post references a discussion with thefind.com themselves and goes on to explain in detail what is actually happening (that the merchants are being penalized, but due to the changes to the search algorithm that Google has made, thefind.com and other sites are ranking higher because they are being deemed “more credible sources “).

The post is a good read and I suggest it to anyone out there who has been “terrorized” by this duplicate content rumor.

http://blog.feedperfect.com/2010/07/does-the-find-create-duplicate-content-issues-for-merchants-in-organic-search-engines/

Hope everyone had a good holiday weekend…

…now get back to work!

:-) CSE.Manager@gmail.com

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Browsing through the wonderful internet for breaking news in the comparison shopping engine world, I stumbled upon some interesting information from ChannelAdvisor in regards to comparison shopping engine conversion rates!

From the ChannelAdvisor information sheet:

In an effort to add to the survey/industry information that is currently available, ChannelAdvisor took a sample of the most common retail categories and highlighted which shopping engines, on average, perform the best for our customers. If your program doesn’t include some of the engines listed below, this could be a lower-risk growth opportunity you should consider.

Comparison Shopping Engine Conversion Rates by Industry

Courtesy of Channel Advisor

What makes this information so useful is that not only does it show the comparison shopping engines’ average conversion rates but they are broken down by the industry.

This information can be used as a “guide” to help you decide which comparison shopping engines you should research for your comparison shopping engine portfolio.

(I say “guide” because these figures are averages, and the industries are quite broad. This information should be used to help, but not be the only factor, in making the decision.)

That is all! I hope the weather is as gorgeous where you are as it is here! Hooray Spring!

CSE.Manager@gmail.com

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Yesterday, Comparison Shopping Engine Management reported a problem with Google Base/Merchant Center. I am happy to report that this issue has been resolved. All of our client’s feeds that went out this morning were picked up and processed by Google without error.

Here is link to the help forum where Google acknowledges the problem:

http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/base/thread?tid=04c2d685fe982779&hl=en

In case you missed it, here is the e-mail that Google was sending out (in error) to its merchants when they submit a file on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week.

Dear Google Merchant Center user,

On March 2, 2010 11:32:44 AM PST you uploaded to Google Merchant Center via FTP a file named “FILENAME.TXT”, but you don’t have a data feed registered with this name. Please verify that you provided the correct file name, including correct capitalization.

This is a computer-generated email. Please do not reply.

You can change your notification settings at http://www.google.com/merchants/basicsettings

CSE.Manager@gmail.com

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