Google Checkout’s Title Goes Missing On Google

  Something look odd in the search results for google checkout? Yes, that’s the official Google Checkout home page listed first, but it’s most definitely NOT the right title for the Google Checkout page. That’s got folks at Digg wondering if Google Checkout has been hijacked, sparked from Jon West’s original post here. No. It’s […]

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Something look odd in the search results for
google checkout?
Yes, that’s the official Google Checkout
home page listed first, but it’s most definitely NOT the right title for the
Google Checkout page. That’s got folks at Digg

wondering
if Google Checkout has been hijacked, sparked from Jon West’s
original post here. No. It’s just
Google being lame. Below, more about how
HiBidder.com
ended up providing the current title for Google Checkout as
listed on Google, as well as a look at the problems of dealing with titles for
pages that a spider can’t access.

Most search engines, including Google, primarily depend on a page’s title tag
to make titles that show up in search results. Need an illustrated guide to
understand this? Jennifer Laycock over at Search Engine Guide has a
nice
tutorial
that came out recently on it.

The title tag is the text that goes within the two parts of a title tag of a
page’s HTML code, like this:

<title>This is where the title goes</title>

The text in that area is used to make the title of a page as listed in search
results, in most cases. If that was really your title, then your page would be
listed like this:

This is where the title goes

Sometimes, pages lack title tags at all. Sometimes, they have title tags
present but no text within the tag itself. In these cases, search engines
sometimes do different things to come up with a title so that the page doesn’t
look bad in results. They might just list a URL in place of the title. Some, in
the past, have said “No Title.”

It’s been some time since I’ve comprehensively surveyed the situation. But
recently, both Google and Yahoo have
experimented more with
using anchor text to
describe pages. This effectively means that how people link to you could be used
to describe your pages, if you’ve neglected your title tags.

It has taken ages to finally convince search engines to stop using
third-party Open Directory and Yahoo Directory descriptions as titles for web pages (an
opt-out you can do by using the
NOODP and NOYDR meta
robots tags
). Now it looks like we’ll need a NOANCHOR options, if anchor
text continues to be used this way.

That brings us to the Google Checkout situation. If Google could reach the
Google Checkout home page, it would likely have used this title tag:

<title>Google Checkout</title>

Which would have listed the site as:

Google Checkout

However, I think the redirection that Google has in place might be preventing
the crawler from reaching the page. Many Google products like Google Checkout
annoyingly have no static URL. If you try to reach the home page at
https://checkout.google.com, a huge redirected URL takes its place. Come one,
Google — enough with this!

It’s not an issue that the page is on a secure https:// server. If that were
the case, then searches for
adsense
would show a funky title for Google’s AdSense page.

However it happened, Google has decided to go with anchor text to come up
with the title for Google Checkout. And that anchor text came from HiBidder.com.
In particular, the Google Checkout title says:

use google checkout on hibidder com free

So where is this on the HiBidder site? When I looked, I didn’t see it at
first. However, a

search
showed 1,300 matches. I looked again, then spotted it in the code
like this:

<a href=”https://checkout.google.com” target=”blank”>
<img src=”images/google_checkout.gif” alt=”Use Google Checkout on
HiBidder.com – Free!
” title=”Use Google Checkout on HiBidder.com – Free!
border=”0″ height=”39″ width=”100″>
</a>

I’ve bolded the text. It’s in both the ALT and TITLE attributes for an image that links to
Google Checkout. So not only is Google using anchor text to make the title, it’s
also using either ALT or TITLE attributes to determine anchor text content, if no actual HTML
link text is provided.

For its part, Google sent me this on the situation

In the overwhelming majority of cases, we use the title tag of the page for
the search results title. When we are unable to extract a title (the page has
no title tag or the tag is empty, for instance), we may use the anchor text in
links to the page to provide a title, which is a better experience for the
searcher than no title or just the URL. This is a better result for the
webmaster as well, since it likely makes the result more compelling to click
on. A webmaster can ensure that anchor text is not used by including an
extractable title for the page in a title tag.

The other time we may use anchor text for the title is when the page is
blocked by a robots.txt file. These URLs may appear in our search results as
“partially indexed pages”, described

here

In these cases, we do not crawl or index the content of the page, and
therefore, don’t extract a title from a page. If the webmaster would prefer
that even the URL for these pages not appear in the search results, they can
put a meta noindex tag on the pages or can request removal via the URL removal
options in webmaster tools.

Note that the lowercasing of the title is a temporary issue that should be
resolved soon

I can understand the desire to put something out to describe pages that are
missing title tags or have blank ones. I’d like to see the search engines come
up with a common standard for this, such as saying something like “No Title” or
“No Title Available” or using the URL as the title.

It’s another issue entirely on what to do about pages that can’t be crawled
but still get listed (Meta
Robots Tag 101: Blocking Spiders, Cached Pages & More
explains more about
how this situation can happen). Going with anchor text can be just as dangerous
and annoying, if not more so, than going with third party directory titles.
Probably, search engines will need to do the same thing in this situations as for pages with
empty or missing title tags.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Danny Sullivan
Contributor
Danny Sullivan was a journalist and analyst who covered the digital and search marketing space from 1996 through 2017. He was also a cofounder of Third Door Media, which publishes Search Engine Land and MarTech, and produces the SMX: Search Marketing Expo and MarTech events. He retired from journalism and Third Door Media in June 2017. You can learn more about him on his personal site & blog He can also be found on Facebook and Twitter.

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