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Jennifer507

: How should I handle search engines auto-correcting the spelling of a site's name? A client's site and company is called 'Tranin Communications' (Tranin is her last name). It ranks well in searches

@Jennifer507

Posted in: #Bing #GoogleSearch #SearchEngines #Seo

A client's site and company is called 'Tranin Communications' (Tranin is her last name).
It ranks well in searches for her name but rather poorly in searches for the name of her site/company.

I realized that this is largely due to* search engines (Google especially) assuming that the query was misspelled and automatically including results for both 'train communications' and 'communications training'. Both of those queries yield many high-ranking sites that completely drown out hers. Sometimes Google even shows results for 'communications training' instead of 'tranin communications', hiding her site altogether.

Is there a way to report an incorrect auto-correction to Google or something I can do to discourage this behavior (e.g. a meta tag)?
My searches have come up cold, any suggestions would be appreciated.

*I've come to this conclusion because her site ranks very highly when the same queries are put in quotes.

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@Gretchen104

Although I agree with w3d's answer, there might be something that you'd want to try.

I had a quick look at this, and although the unfortunate name/correction it appears that the site doesn't rank #1 for Tranin Communications (in quotes), assuming the site is traningrants.com, and the first page to rank is the about page.

A quick look to some backlink analysis tool revealed that no link is linking that site. (there might be a few, but those tools cannot see any).
Some backlinks with the words "tranin communcations" (as the one in this post) pointing to your home page should help to rank #1 at least for the quoted query, and if Google sees some links with the word "tranin" in it, it could think that it's not a spelling mistake afterall.
Probably Google will still consider it a spelling mistake even after a few links, but it's worth trying, and if anything you would improve the position of the quoted query.

By the way, be careful not to overdo: overoptimised anchor text might incur in a penalty from Google. (use variations of the anchor text just to be safe)

PS: the homepage might start ranking slightly better in a couple of days or so just for the link in this post, especially if this is the first external link with targeted anchor text to your site.

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@Ogunnowo487

The problem in this particular case is that whilst the "auto-correction" looks wrong to you, for most people on the planet it's probably correct.

But either way, I really don't think there is much you can do about it unfortunately. What you are asking for is a potential tweak in their search algorithm.

Google's default site search does a lot more than simply auto-correct, it attempts to "improve" your search in several ways:



suggest spelling corrections and alternative spellings
personalize your search by using information such as sites you’ve visited before
include synonyms of your search terms to find related results
find results that match similar terms to those in your query
search for words with the same stem, like "running" when you search for [ run ]



Source: support.google.com/websearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&p=g_verb&answer=1734130
However, a user can turn off all these 'improvements' by using the Verbatim tool (option at the bottom of the left hand column). You do not need to use double quotes.

But this is obviously an end user option, it's not something that an individual site can influence. I don't even think a user can set this as their default search.

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