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SEO in the age of the semantic web SMX East 2013 Conference Presentation in NYC AN INTRODUCTION TO ENTITIES David Amerland

An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

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An introduction to what entities are in semantic search, based upon my presentation as a keynote speaker at the SMX East 2013 conference in NYC.

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Page 1: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

SEO in the age of the semantic webSMX East 2013 Conference Presentation in NYC

AN INTRODUCTION TO ENTITIES

David Amerland

Page 2: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

IMAGINE, FOR A MOMENT… A TREE

Close your eyes …. and think of everything you associate it with.

Page 3: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

IF YOU DID WHAT THE PREVIOUS SLIDE SUGGESTED YOU KNOW THAT A TREE• Has categories (deciduous, evergreen, coniferous, wide-leaved)

• Has properties (hard, organic, aromatic)

• Has attributes (it floats on water, burns in the fireplace)

• Is associated with products (paper, buildings, bridges, ships and planes even)

• Brings up personal memories (Christmas tree, a tree you planted in your backyard)

• Can be an abstraction (the deodorizer dangling from your car mirror)

• Can have personal significance (the green movement, forests)

• Is associated with actions (root systems spreading underground, soil support)

• Is also an abstract symbol (endurance, persistence)

Page 4: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

AS A MATTER OF FACT…A tree, in your mind’s eye, is both a personalized and generic object that has both personal significance unique only to you and a factual existence that is generic to everyone on the planet.

Everything you know about a “tree” is your own personal knowledge graph.

That would mean that the word “tree” then is an Entity.

Well, almost, but not quite…

Page 5: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

THE WORD “TREE” IS NOT AN ENTITYTo prove this let’s consider the word “arbre” which means tree, in French, or the word “dendro” which means tree in Greek.

The moment you learn that those words mean tree, in your mind, you instantly associate everything in your Knowledge Graph, with that word, even if you cannot express it in that language.

So really a “tree” in your head is a concept that is divorced from the words you use to describe it. That concept is defined by all the knowledge associated with it. The moment you learn the word tree in another language you simply, mentally, remap the Knowledge Graph to that language.

Essentially that’s how Entities work in Google’s semantic search. The Knowledge Graph is what defines them.

Page 6: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

AS SEO PROFESSIONALS WE THOUGHT WE KNEW HOW THE WEB WORKED …

We look beneath the fabric of the web and see the code that runs it … the connections that form it.

Page 7: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

SEO IN THE PAST HAS ALWAYS BEEN ABOUT PROBABILITIES • Search returned statistically probable answers to keyword-laden search queries.

• To succeed in search, we needed to ‘load’ the dice. And we had a variety of techniques in our arsenal on how to do that exactly:

• Keywords, links, anchor text, on-page techniques, inbound links …

• If something did not work we needed to increase quantity, volume, intensity. It was always a case of having to dial things up.

Page 8: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

BUT IN A SEMANTIC WEB STATISTICS FADE AWAYThe traditional “ten links in search”

Are changing, becoming:

Personalized

Populated by people with familiar faces

More accurate

Page 9: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

SEARCH ITSELF IS CHANGING:

• Mobile

• Voice

• Local

• Personal

• Conversational

• Predictive (Google Now)

• Functional (Google Maps)

• Infontational (YouTube)

Information is growing at an exponential rate and search is changing with it

Volume ● Velocity ● Variety ●Veracity all Big Data components play a key role

Page 10: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

AND ENTITIES ARE THE NEW DRIVER:

Entities are generated relational mapping that uncovers the association between different data points.

This is RADICAL. Entities become trusted points around which other data revolves.

Page 11: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

ENTITIES ARE PRODUCED IN A VARIETY OF WAYS:

• Imported from trusted sources (Wikipedia, Freebase, Metaweb)

• Extracted from web pages

• Data mining in the social web

• Sentiment mining

Page 12: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

LET’S GET TECHNICAL:

Page 13: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

ENTITIES ARE A CHALLENGE TO SEO BECAUSE:• They provide answers at the search box rather than suggestions

Page 14: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

OPTIMIZATION APPEARS TO BE REDUCED TO ANSWERING A SEARCH QUERY• But let’s look at it again:

Page 15: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

THE ‘ENTITY’ THAT IS THE ANSWER TO THE SEARCH QUERY “WHO IS THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES” PRODUCED:• An answer

• A biography with associated links

• Recent posts with links

• Associated entities, complete with links

A ‘one’ answer result generated a much wider, related field of data than it might have been possible before.

Page 16: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

ENTITIES: THE CHALLENGE & THE OPPORTUNITY

• For SEOs the challengers are as steep as the question is simple:

• Changing search interface (screenless computers and keyless devices)

• Less reliance on keywords

• Deprecation of existing, on-page SEO techniques

• Loss of real estate space in SERPs

• Reduced reliance on statistical association in results

• How do you take advantage of Entities to make up for it all?

Page 17: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

REVERSE ENGINEER ENTITY AS A DRIVER:• Authority

• Trust

• Reputation

• Influence

• If that’s the end result how can it be reduced further into manageable steps?

• What actions can be taken at the content-creation interface that will produce these outcomes, and how can this be ensured?

Page 18: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

THINK:• Volume

• Velocity

• Variety

• Veracity

ADD:

• Connection

• Social discovery

• Social Buzz

Authorship & ‘Author Rank’

Page 19: An Introduction to Entities in Semantic Search

DAVID AMERLAND

Author of Google Semantic Search

http://davidamerland.com

Google+

Twitter: @davidamerland