Linda

Google Merchant Center LogoeCommerce companies who participate in Google’s comparison shopping engine, Google Product Search, could see a decline in referrals come September 22, 2011. Google has released a new version of required attributes, intended to make the comparison shopping experience better the for end user. Online retailers may find themselves in dire straights, mobilizing to address those new requirements. Google has slated attribute requirements will have a deadline of September 22, 2011. At that time, feeds with products that do not conform to the new attribute guidelines will “be suspended from Google Product Search until the issues have been addressed. In case of repeated violations of our quality standards, your products will be suspended for at least one week after the second violation, and for at least one month after the third violation.” – From Google Merchant Center Data Feed Policies.

So what is new and how does it effect you?

Previously, Google feeds required a few attributes and they were applicable to all products. Then they had recommended attributes that were specific to different industries or product types. Here is the new list of attributes your should have in your feed.

  • id
  • title
  • description
  • link
  • image_Link
  • condition
  • availability
  • price
  • google_product_category
  • product_type
  • brand
  • mpn
  • gtin
  • tax
  • shipping
  • shipping_weight
  • online_only
  • additional_image_link

Then it gets complicated. Depending on the types of products you have, additional attributes become required. Google will define your product types by the entry provided in the google_product_category. This is information defined by the Google Product Search Taxonomy.

“Currently, the ‘Google product category’ attribute only needs to be provided for products that belong to the following seven product categories in feeds that target the US, UK, Germany, and France:

  • Apparel & Accessories > Clothing
  • Apparel & Accessories > Shoes
  • Apparel & Accessories (Note that submitting this value for clothing and shoes is not acceptable.)
  • Media > Books
  • Media > DVDs & Movies
  • Media > Music
  • Software > Video Game Software

For products that belong to other product categories, providing this attribute is recommended. For countries other than the US, Japan, UK, Germany and France, this attribute is recommended for all product categories.”

For businesses selling products that would fall into the Apparel & Accessories category, additional attributes are required.  They are:

  • gender
  • age_group
  • color
  • size

For businesses selling products that have Variants, addition attributes are required. Variants are versions of the same product which only vary based on colors, materials, patterns, or sizes.  They are:

  • item_group_id
  • color
  • material
  • pattern
  • size

If you are using variants on apparel, color and size attributes do not need to be repeated.

Primary Changes to Google Merchant Center Policies

Google changed — or rather clarified — two rules.

  • The data from the feed has to accurately match the actual product on the site.
  • The price has to match the price most prominently displayed on the site.

For the first rule, it should be understood that the product represented in the feed should be the product on the ecommerce website.  What is new is Google will periodically check to ensure the information syncs up.  This includes price as well.  If it does not, your product and potentially your whole feed, will be removed from Google Product Search.

For the second rule, this directly addresses ecommerce sites that have product detail pages where there are options and those options may be priced differently.  In essence, if you have t shirts in small, medium and large that are $9.99 and extra large and xx large are $11.99, the price you should include in your feed is the price a customer would first see when they land on your product detail page. If the default size option is medium, then the price in the feed should reflect that option 0 or $9.99 in this case.

There are lots more idiosyncrasies involved with these changes. For a complete explanation from Google, click here.

If you’d like more information about how to update your Google Product Search feeds, contact Linda Bateman at 831.531.2479 or at http://www.verticalrail.com/contact.php

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qrcode

What you will need:

1. A QR Code (Such as the one you see above) that has been created with the correct URL to direct to. Here is a link where you can create your QR Code: http://qrcode.kaywa.com/
2. A smartphone
3. Barcode scanning application

Directions:

With your Smartphone, use the barcode scan app and follow these steps:

1. Open App on your smartphone.
2. Scan QR Code above.
3. If your phone presents a link, click link. If it goes there automatically, POOF! You are done. :)

Since you are there, click the “Like” button at the top.

That’s it! Happy QR Code scanning…

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Data Feed Optimization Discussion – Palo Alto – SVAMA

February 18, 2010

The Silicon Valley American Marketing Association is hosting a discussion on Data Feed Optimization as part of an explosive e-commerce marketing plan.  If you are in the Palo Alto area and can swing it, you should not miss the Web Strategy Morning Forum.

From the SVAMA event description -

“E-Commerce sales are skyrocketing. Comparison Shopping Engines are the new shopping malls. Window shopping is now Microsoft Windows shopping. Prepare your e-commerce business for what’s next.

Linda Bateman of VerticalRail.com will host a discussion [...]
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Become.com – Affinity Index Ranking Technology is Patent Approved

January 12, 2010

Become.com has had their Affinity Index Ranking (AIR™) technology patent approved by the US Patent Office.

That is the news out of the Sunnyvale, California headquarters.  It is big too, as Become.com is a fast growing comparison shopping engine who prides itself on this technology. This technology assigns relative rank values to links (web pages) by analyzing quality points in a nodal network.

“Rather than rank pages based on keyword saturation and position, AIR provides the most relevant pages higher positioning [...]
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Yahoo! Shuts Down Submit API. Developers Forced to Apply with Pricegrabber

January 11, 2010

So all you developer types who have been keen on the Yahoo! Shopping Product Submit API… step forward and get your new permissions from Pricegrabber.  Better hurry though, as you have until March 11, 2010 to make the adjustment. Welcome to another round of Yahoo! outsourcing.

Announced earlier today,  search engine giant Yahoo!, entered into what they call a “strategic partnership” with the well known comparison shopping engine, Pricegrabber,  to power the Shopping Web Services API, including Shopping Results (the “Yahoo! [...]
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SortPrice and the Facebook Wishlist

December 22, 2009

Sounds like the title to a children’s book.  The potential ramifications certainly point to thousands of Facebook users suddenly giddy with child-like excitement upon receiving notification that the special item they have had on their wishlist is now available at the price they are willing to pay. And it is a simple Facebook Application.  So right there in my toolbar, I now see every application that can get me through any day: Farmville, Mafia Wars, Bejeweled Blitz, Foodfight and now… Wishlist.

Wishlist. [...]
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Comparison Shopping Engine Holiday Rate Changes

November 4, 2009

‘Tis the season!

For e-commerce stores, that simply means being aware of the annual tradition of comparison shopping engines hiking up their costs per click. In an effort to capture a bit of their own holiday glee, CSE’s like Pricegrabber, NexTag and Shopzilla raise their rates by as much as 25%.

How does that work?

Cost Per Click – Bid Model:

If you list products in NexTag, under the TOYS category, your normal minimum bid is 25 cents per click.  During the holiday shopping [...]
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It's November… Do you Know Where Your Products Are?

November 2, 2009

The holiday shopping season is already underway.  Long gone is the time that  holiday shopping kicked off the day after Thanksgiving.  Retail shelves are already full of holiday offerings.  What is amazing is that shopping carts are already full of holiday products.

I ventured into the local Walmart on Halloween fully expecting aisles full of families gathering that last bag of candy in preparation for evening festivities. I was truly shocked. The gardening section of the store had already been transformed into [...]
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Unusual E-Commerce Product of the Day

October 8, 2009

When a person, such as I, researches comparison shopping engines like Google Product Search as much as I do, one is bound to come upon those special products that makes you scratch your head in consumer wonderment.

Over the next few months, I will bring you prime examples of just those types of products.  Please… (and I really mean this) subscribe to our Side Tracked section here and offer up your findings as well so we can all share in a [...]
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Just Create a Data Feed… Yeah Right.

September 2, 2009

Product data feed optimization is simple.  All you have to do is figure out if you can generate a feed from within your e-commerce platform that will perfectly map your product’s attributes to accepted and required attribute fields of each comparison shopping engine.  If that can’t be done, you need to find a way to gather the required information and set up a feed on your own.  The majority of CSE’s will accept a data feed in one of three [...]
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