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Google Trends on your website
6 de mayo de 2009
One thing we've noticed here at Google over the years is that the more popular something becomes, the more people search for it online. Our annual
zeitgeist
catalogs some of the more interesting trends we've seen in a year's worth of web search data. We also like to keep our eye out for more timely events, such as the
U.S. presidential inauguration
.
As we head into the last month of this season's "American Idol," we thought this would be a good opportunity to introduce our new
embeddable Google Trends gadget
to track your favorite trends, right on your own website. It's as easy as "cut and paste" to showcase the rising popularity of your own idols, even if they're not on a hit television show. You get to choose which trends you want to track.
I've been using
Google Trends
to follow my favorite "Idol" contestants for the past three years. It all started in 2006 when I was a
Chris Daughtry
fan. Looking at the search trends I could tell I wasn't the only one, and I felt pretty good about the odds that Chris was going to fare well against the other contestants.
Going into the final four, Chris had a lead on
Elliott Yamin
, and I was pretty confident he'd advance. But over the week leading up to the performance, Chris' lead began to diminish. Despite his early lead, Chris ended up getting eliminated. I was totally bummed, but wasn't all too surprised given that they were neck and neck on Trends days before elimination night.
Fast-forward to 2008. I was rooting for
David Cook
, and after each performance I'd check so see how he was doing on Trends.
I was excited to see him getting more and more popular each week, and each week I could rest a little easier when I found out that David was more popular than the other contestants. David ended up walking away with the crown that year, and I had finally picked a winner!
This year, I had the good fortune of attending an "American Idol" show in person. Not really knowing what to expect, I was completely blown away by the evening's final performance:
Adam Lambert
's rendition of the Tears for Fears song "Mad World." I could literally feel the building move under my feet from his powerful vocals and the roar of the crowd. Since then I have been an Adam fan all the way. And just when I thought that
Allison Iraheta
was closing in, Adam raised the bar yet again with his rockin' performance of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love." Let's see what Google Trends has to say about Adam this week. And if after last night's show you're worried that your favorite "Idol" had a bad night and might not make it to the next round, see if you can
glean some insights
from the search trends.
Posted by R.J. Pittman, Director, Product Management
Etiquetas
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41
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26
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131
Africa
19
Android
58
apps
419
April 1
4
Asia
39
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48
commerce
12
computing history
7
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33
culture
12
developers
120
diversity
35
doodles
68
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144
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46
faster web
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google.org
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50
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124
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19
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19
photos
39
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139
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71
privacy
66
recruiting and hiring
32
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31
search
505
search quality
24
search trends
118
security
36
small business
31
user experience and usability
41
youtube and video
140
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