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  1. International Expansion: Break Down Barriers With Google+ Hangouts

    Then all three of you – you the English speakers, your clients the Japanese speakers, and the translator – can communicate easier without having to rely on the sub-par Internet translations. Example: If you're doing business with Japan, you're...

  2. 6 Ways You Can Put a Little ‘Gangnam Style’ into Video Marketing

    The natural way a person native to the English language will look at something is from left to right. Makes sense right – it's the way English is written. The first link is a direct link to download their song on iTunes.

  3. Semantic Search in 2025

    If you had been learning English as a second language, this would have been a very helpful exercise in helping you understand what the sentence was trying to say. Just as your elementary English teacher taught you, there are rules that need to be...

  4. Google Updates Above the Fold Page Layout Algorithm

    In a tweeted “weather report,” Cutts said less than 0.7 percent of English language queries are affected. This update is reported to have a slightly less effect and affects English queries only. Google’s Matt Cutts has announced the first official...

  5. Google Crisis Response: From Search Engine to Information Provider

    Crisis response is a global effort, so it is not always in the English language. The first "product" (for lack of a better word), was PersonFinder which generated over fifty-five thousand records of people looking for information on loved ones.

  6. The Growing Importance of International Mobile Search

    For a long time now English has served as the lingua franca, or common language, of the Internet. English is still the most commonly used language online but it still represents only just over a quarter of total usage.

  7. CIVETS: New Global Marketing Opportunities in Emerging Economies

    You might think that all your communication and online marketing can be done in English, since English is the dominant language of the Internet. They also tend to search in their native language first, even when looking internationally.