Mr. Google, Tear Down This Google Trends Wall!

About two seconds after Google Trends For Websites came out, people started noticing that one company’s websites oddly had no data available — Google’s own. Google will tell you all about the traffic to competitors like Yahoo and Microsoft but gives away nothing about itself. The same is true for the newly-released Google Ad Planner […]

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Google Trends for Websites Without Google

About two seconds after
Google Trends For
Websites came out
,

people


started

noticing
that one company’s websites oddly had no data available — Google’s own.
Google will tell you all about the traffic to competitors

like Yahoo and Microsoft
but gives away nothing about itself. The same
is true for the newly-released
Google Ad Planner
tool
. It’s not
right, despite Google’s weak excuse of not wanting to provide "financial
guidance" about itself via the tool. Google either needs to post its own information pronto or
allow any company to opt out.

The First Rule Of Google Trends Is You Don’t Talk About Google Trends

Why do searches for traffic data about

google.com, youtube.com, blogger.com
, and other Google properties reveal
nothing? The official statement, from Google:

We have a policy of not providing interim financial guidance, and have
decided not to release Google numbers in accordance with that policy. We are
always open to reconsidering decisions we’ve made, but at this point, for
these financial guidance reasons, we do not share Google numbers in the
Trends for Websites tool.

First of all, Google’s policy has been to avoid giving financial guidance
period, not just "interim" guidance. To go back to the original founders’
IPO letter:

Although we may discuss long term trends in our business, we do not plan
to give earnings guidance in the traditional sense.

Financial Guidance Excuses

So let’s skip this "interim" guidance nonsense. Yes, every quarter Google
does officially release some information. But even between quarters, there’s
no end of Google announcements or interviews that have stats or figures that
could be seen as "guidance" about the company. For example, Eric Schmidt
commented
recently that a stock
split is unlikely but doesn’t rule it out. Isn’t that guidance?

It’s not like Google hands out traffic figures on a regular basis anyway.
Here’s the press
release
for its last quarterly filing. Now how much traffic did
Google.com get compared to the previous quarter or the same time the year
before? The release doesn’t say. Can we conclude that traffic figures aren’t
financial guidance period? Because if they were, I should be seeing them
here.

I can understand concerns Google might have about traffic figures being
misinterpreted by financial analysts to mean something about the company’s
future prospects. Goodness knows folks jumped all over comScore’s
paid search clicks
figure
when that was only partial data that meant nothing (and then
blamed comScore
for their own bad analysis — and

some continue
assuming those figures alone mean anything).

Still, there are plenty of other sources for traffic data. These will get
interpreted regardless of what Google puts out there. And that leads to
another point. By withholding its own traffic estimates, Google is making it
harder for anyone trying to interpret figures by looking at a "basket" of
reports. As a result, some might paint a better or worse picture of how
Google is doing because they lack figures from an important new tool to have
in the mix, Google’s own.

Lastly, while I can’t get traffic data from Google Trends, I
can still find the
number of people searching for Google. That rise will be seen by some as a
proxy for traffic figures. So why not just give me the traffic figures
themselves?

Pick your point, the financial guidance argument just feels like a
convenient excuse. Let’s see Google reconsider this right now and change its
mind.

Allow Opting-Out & Myth Of Private Traffic Data

With the release of Google Trends For Websites, there’s been talk that Google is
somehow handing out "confidential" information about websites and
should thus allow for opting-out of reporting.
My response
to that on Sphinn was:

Confidential? Please. You were getting it from places like Alexa, Compete
and Quantcast already. And if you were paying big bucks, you were getting it
from Hitwise, comScore and NetRatings. Data’s been out there for years, in
various degrees of accuracy — but to say it is confidential is
overreaching.

This data IS out there already, not just from Google but from a variety
of other tools as I named. Saying that what happens on your web site is "private" is like
saying that someone standing on a public street and watching the people who
go in and out of a store and logging what they bought is violating the store’s
privacy. The store is out in public view — the data is easily seen and
logged.

OK, side note here. I’ve long written about how
ISPs are a bigger
issue
to me with privacy than search engines, in how they merrily see
EVERYTHING we do on the web and some secretly sell that data to web
metrics companies (secretly, because they certainly don’t tell their
customers this is happening, nor do the web metrics companies tell you the
ISPs that they harvest from).

There are private things that happen within your website, stuff that no
one can really learn without your active help. But much data ceased being "private" years ago due to the ISP harvesting along
with toolbar tracking. Hence, yelling that Google shouldn’t release
such information is trying to push the genie back into the bottle.

Similarly, the idea that people should be able to opt-out largely doesn’t
make much sense. None of the other tools allow for opting-out of them.
Google could add an opt-out, but it would just mean the data was out there
in a variety of ways — especially through paid web metrics tools.

Still, I’m totally behind the idea that Google should provide opt-out as
long as it continues to effectively opt-out itself. That’s just not fair. If
Google stays out, then it should give any site the ability to do the same
without the

absurd requirement
that the sites completely opt-out of being listed in
Google at all.

Related Webmaster Issues

In preparing this follow-up article, I asked more about the underlying
data that Google uses, especially whether the Google Toolbar was involved.
Google said it couldn’t discuss its "secret sauce," which I found
disappointing. But as my
Google Ad Planner
Launches, Offers Site Demographic Profiles
post explains, I think the
Google Toolbar is involved.

Also spotted today via Sphinn,
Google Trends For Website results

are now starting to show up
in Google searches for particular domains.
Of course, looking at a search for

searchengineland.com
, I see that Quantcast and Alexa reports for our
site are also there. So why should Google stay out? Maybe they shouldn’t.
But since Google already blocks regular Google Trends data from being
listed, this might be an oversight. A nice change might be a OneBox/Smart
Answer-style result at the top of the results that link out to ratings from
a variety of providers, including Google Trends.

Opt-In Data Sharing

In contrast to opt-out, it might be nice if Google went the opposite way. Allow for
verified traffic metrics, like Quantcast
does. Over there, you can choose to carry Quantcast code on your web site.
Do that, and Quantcast will adjust your figures based on your actual
traffic, rather than guesses. And some good news: according to the Google Ad
Planner

help files
, it’s something being considered:

In the future, we may consider ways to improve the accuracy of Google Ad
Planner data by allowing owners to contribute additional data from their
sites.

OK, I know there are about six sites out on the web that still don’t yet
have some type of Google tracking code already on their sites (AdSense, Google
Analytics, Google Website Optimizer, FeedBurner … the ways that Google
tracks goes on and on). So the idea that we start handing Google even more
data isn’t going to go over well with everyone.
Aaron
Wall notes
again how the data Google already has enables them to do many
things — and I’m with him on lots of it (see also my
Google: Master Of
Closing The Loop?
post).

But consider this. Personally, I don’t want to stick 1,001 different
tracking codes on my site for Quantcast, Google, FeedBurner, and so on.
C’mon, Google — take the lead to start an open tracking system. Anyone can
place tracking code that anyone else can use and tap into. Get all the
metrics companies together and agree on some much needed standards. Oh, and
shove it on your own sites so we know what’s going on there just like you
know what goes on with us. Now that would be transparency.


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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