• I am not sure what the whole purpose of the recent changes and requirements in Google Shopping do or will mean.... But none of them have been a "good" thing for smaller merchants.

    The data standardization within Google Product Search has put like products from very large retailers capable of deep discounts in the same page product lineup with smaller merchants who cannot compete on price. The smaller merchants who would generally seek to make their listing somewhat unique to grab longtail product searches can no longer do that. Smaller merchants in the product lineup with Pet Smart for example, have few options to elicit a click from a searcher.

    For example, if I search on Google.com for "pet gear" I am given the following product choices:

    Obviously, being a "regular shopper" I select the product with the stars! I am taken to a page where Google offers me the following retailers:

    1. Amazon.com
    2. Walmart
    3. Buy.com
    4. Sam's Club
    5. Sears
    6. Overstock.com
    7. The Sportsman Guide
    8. Meijer
    9. Wayfair
    10. eBay

    I find it rather funny that the Sam's Club price is $12.16 more than Walmart. However, this set of results most disturbs me because nearly ALL of these pampered results are using a very "vanilla", UN-engaging, unimaginative, duplicate product description! That's a real pisser huh?

    Nope, the real pisser is that hiding in the lower left under these results is....... the rest of us!

    Soooooo, I click the next arrow 2 times before I find a single small retailer! I know you're probably mad, but it gets worse. I click and click all the way to page 5 of the results before finding a unique product description! That's bullshit!

    Corporate America strikes again, the "little guy" is forced to reduce cost in order to compete.... Profit becomes nil and the retailer fails. All this while companies like Walmart continue to bankrupt manufacturers with their volume pricing demands so low that the manufacturer makes no margin. So, since Walmart eats companies, does this mean that someday there will be no choice, but rather companies like Walmart will become all their is.... "The Walmart Effect".

    Is Walmart Good for America? provides a provocative examination of the impact
    Wal-Mart has had on the U.S. economy. The documentary highlights the changing
    relationship between manufacturers and the so-called "big-box" retailers, exemplified by
    Wal-Mart, that has contributed to the bankruptcy of some American businesses and a
    growing unemployment rate. While Wal-Mart supporters tout the advantages of one-stop,
    low-cost shopping, others are alarmed at both the outsourcing that has made these low
    prices possible and how large retailers affect smaller, local businesses. FRONTLINE
    examines the winners and the losers as it documents how:
    • Global retailers are superceding manufacturers in making decisions about
    product quality, type and price.
    • A basic flaw in the United States-China trade relationship is that we can afford
    to buy Chinese products, but they cannot afford to buy ours.
    • Wal-Mart has approximately 6,000 global suppliers; 80 percent of these are
    from China.
    • China is becoming the biggest producer of high-tech products in the world.
    • TCL, a Chinese company, is now the largest producer of televisions in the world
    and almost all of their U.S. exports go to Wal-Mart.
    • The United States is exporting raw materials to Third World countries and
    importing their manufactured products, which is a reversal of former economic
    relations.
    • In 2003, the United States had a $120 billion trade deficit with China and it is
    expected to be even higher in 2004.

    So what is Google's part in all of this?

    I am seriously disturbed that, whether intentionally or not, Google is laying the framework for a capitalist shopping experience on their platform. This is America, our uniqueness, intuitiveness, drive, ambition and imagination make great companies.... Such as Google even. How can a company as big, powerful, American and creative "eat" these small retailers?

  • When logging in to Google Merchant Center you will see the following "Alert".

    Due to recent change to item and feed limits, you may experience errors when submitting your items or registering a new feed.

    Tuesday, November 22, 2011 | 3:43 PM

    Labels: 

    Due to recent change to item and feed limits, you may experience errors when submitting your items or registering a new feed.

    To check whether your new feed is affected by our new item limit, navigate to the Data Feeds tab and click on “x of x items inserted (view errors and warnings)” to the right of the newly registered data feed. You may also receive an error when registering a new feed if you reach your feed limit. You can request an item and feed limit increase by contacting us through our Help Center.

    Important: Existing feeds that have been registered before 11/22 will not be affected, but only feeds that were registered in the Merchant Center after 11/22. When you update your existing feeds, make sure to not delete the existing feed but simply initiate an upload under the already registered feed to prevent your existing feed from becoming subject to the temporary limit. You can do so by choosing an upload method right next to the data feed name under Data Feeds>Upload and follow the instructions as usual.

    Google recommends that data feeds be under 20MB for upload within Google Merchant Center, while scheduled fetch and FTP uploaded feeds can be up to 1GB. Compressed feeds must be under 500MB or you will need to split them in to 500MB or less files.

    While most will not be affected by this, I think new feeds will come under deeper scrutiny with regard to size, data quality, freshness and so on.

© 2003-2012 PRO-Webs, Inc. Woodbine, GA 31569-2051