The official blog for Google Maps
Hotpot is going Places
April 8, 2011
(Cross-posted from the
Google Places Blog
.)
Last November,
we introduced Hotpot
, our recommendation engine to help people discover great new places when they search on Google. It’s simple: Rate and review the places you know, add friends whose opinions you trust and we serve you up personalized recommendations based on those tastes.
Since then, we’ve released an
iPhone
and
Android
app, integrated Hotpot recommendations into
Google.com
and
Google Maps
, expanded to more than
47 languages
and enabled people to
share their ratings and reviews
to Twitter. While busy iterating on the product side, we’ve also launched
marketing and community campaigns
in five cities in the U.S.: Portland, Ore.; Austin, Texas; Las Vegas, Nev.; Madison, Wis.; and Charlotte, N.C.
It’s been incredibly exciting to watch Hotpot grow—the community has quickly expanded to millions of users who are rating more than one million times per month and enjoying a truly personalized view of the world. Based on this success, we’ve decided to graduate Hotpot to be a permanent part of our core local product offering,
Google Places
. Rolling Hotpot into Google Places helps simplify the connection between the places that are rated and reviewed and the more than 50 million places that already have an online presence through Google Places—places that millions of people search for and find every day on Google.
Many of you first asked us at Hotpot’s launch: Why the name?
Hotpot
, the dish, describes a shared eating experience. To us, the name embodied the communal experience of sharing your ratings and reviews with friends, and getting recommendations in return.
Though the name Hotpot may be going away, you can expect even more “Hotpotness” in Google Places. We have big plans to continue adding more features to Google Places that make it even easier to rate, discover and share the places you love whenever you’re using Google. So stay tuned to the new
Google Places Blog
for product updates, tips, tricks and news from our city campaigns.
Posted by Lior Ron, Google Hotpot (Places!) Product Manager
See your location history dashboard and more with Google Maps 5.3 for Android
April 4, 2011
[Cross-posted from the
Google Mobile Blog
]
Today, we’re happy to announce
Google Maps 5.3 for Android
, which lets you see your Google Location History dashboard, check in at “home,” and add your own aspects for places when rating them.
Location History dashboard
If you’ve
enabled Location History
for
Google Latitude
, you’ve been able to visualize interesting trends in your location history with a
personal dashboard
at
google.com/latitude
on your computer. Now, you can also see your dashboard on your phone by tapping
View location history
from your Latitude profile. You’ll be able to see right on your phone how far you’ve travelled as well as an estimate of how much time you’ve spent at home, at work, or out.
If you haven’t yet, you can enable Location History from your
computer
or from Latitude’s Settings menu on your phone. Location History is 100% opt-in and is private to you and nobody else. You can always delete any of your location history from the
Manage History
tab or correct the estimated work and home locations from the
dashboard
on your computer.
View your location history dashboard from your Latitude profile on your phone and see estimates of where you’ve spent your time.
Check in at home
Now that you can see how much time you spend at “home”, you might want to let friends know when you’re there.
Checking in at places using Latitude
is another way to keep a history of places you’ve been and also lets you share when you’re there. I love letting friends and family know when I’m at a cafe or park, but sometimes I want them to know that I’m relaxing at home or made it back safely from a road trip. So now, I can start checking in at “home” in Latitude:
Check in from Latitude and tap “Home - Tap to set your location” at the bottom of the nearby places list if you don’t have one yet.
Use the estimated current address or enter in your home address yourself.
Once you’ve checked in at home once, “Home” will appear at the top of the list when you’re checking in near there.
Like Latitude and other check-ins, checking in at home is entirely opt-in. Your set “home” location is not searchable and only you can check in there. Just like any other check-in, you can choose with whom to share your home check-ins (along with your name and address info).
Add your own aspects for places
When you’re rating places on the go in Maps using
Google Places with Hotpot
, you could always quickly leave feedback on a specific aspect or characteristic of a place, such as the food or ambiance. Before, we’d automatically include aspects about places that were commonly mentioned in reviews. Now, you can add your own aspects for each place. So if you think a place has a beautiful view or great music, you can add it yourself and quickly share it with the world.
When rating places, you can add your own aspects like “music” for places and leave quick feedback.
To get started, update
Google Maps from Android Market
on devices with Android OS 1.6+ anywhere Google Maps and Latitude are already available.
Posted by Kenneth Leftin, Software Engineer, Google Maps for mobile team
Mapping Hotpot Ratings in Austin, Texas, to Discover the Popular Spots
March 28, 2011
(Cross-posted on the
Hotpot Blog
.)
For a lot of attendees at
SXSW
this month, including myself, it was our first trip to Austin, Texas. We’ve all heard stories about the great restaurants and bars found throughout the city, but I didn’t know where to start looking.
Luckily for us, on February 11, Google launched a campaign in Austin to promote
Hotpot
, a new tool to help you find the places you’ll love. Rate and review the places you know using Hotpot, and Google will personalize your search results based on your preferences and recommendations from friends.
To help newcomers identify great places in Austin, we began importing anonymous rating signals into Google Fusion Tables in near real-time. When a new rating came in, it was directly inserted into Fusion Tables using the
Fusion Tables API
. In the examples below we used a FusionTablesLayer with the heat map option enabled. We used
Styled Maps
to tone down the background colors to make the heat map stand out more.
After the first day of collecting anonymous Austin ratings, using the heat map function in Fusion Tables, we were able to see a few patterns start to emerge:
Austin, Texas - 24hrs of Hotpot ratings heat map starting on March 1, 2011
Just 24 hours of rating data was able to provide a good idea of where to target my Hotpot search in Austin, but I wanted to see what the concentration would be like after a few days. With just 12 days of Hotpot data, the heat map generated in Fusion Tables really starts to show much more concentrated patterns:
Austin, Texas — Hotpot ratings heat map March 1, 2011, to March 12
Having never been to Austin, I could tell by looking at the heat map that the hottest places in the city are along 6th Street, between Lamar Avenue and the I-35. Additionally, Guadalupe Street near the University of Texas at Austin campus also has a lot of activity. Based on the high activity, those areas would be a good place to start exploring the city.
If you’d like to watch Hotpot trends as they shape over the coming days, you can view more Hotpot ratings in near real-time on
google.com/austin
.
Posted by Carlos Cuesta, Geo APIs Product Marketing Manager
Baseline to baseline, we’ve got the basketball games covered
March 14, 2011
[Cross-posted from the
Official Google Blog
]
Do you hear the dribble on the court and the chanting of the fans? Following an action-packed week of
buzzer beaters
, the 2011 NCAA® Championship here in the U.S. promises to be as exciting as ever.
As a college hoops fan, I often wish I could experience the games sitting in the arenas—and I’m sure I’m not alone. This year, our
college basketball tournament map
lets you get as close as you can to the games without leaving your desk thanks to 3D models of the tournament’s 14 arenas. Take a virtual tour of the venues by watching the
video
below, or
download this tour
and open it in
Google Earth
.
Plus, we’ve created a
special page
for you to keep track of all the excitement during the next few weeks. You can see an up-to-date tournament schedule, explore the college campuses in Street View and click through to watch the actual games on NCAA® March Madness on Demand®. You can also create a bracket using Google Docs, read Google News articles on the games and download basketball apps from the Chrome Web Store. It’s all here (along with a fun surprise) at
www.google.com/collegebasketball2011
.
And since there’s been a
long-running debate
over whether teams playing closer to their home court have an advantage, we added a “Distance Tool” on the
map
to make it easier to measure how far schools have to travel from game to game. We’ll see how things play out, but the defending champion Duke Blue Devils may have to travel more than 2,000 miles to Anaheim if they win their first two games.
As my friends always say when we can’t wait for the tournament to begin, “
Send it in, Jerome!
” May your favorite school reach the finals and we hope you enjoy all the basketball fun at
www.google.com/collegebasketball2011
.
Posted by Aaron Weissman, Google Maps Marketing (
San Francisco King of the Rock winner
)
Google Hotpot now on Google.com and around the world
February 1, 2011
[Cross-posted from the
Hotpot Community Blog
]
Back in November,
we introduced Hotpot
, a new local recommendation engine powered by you and your friends. Using Hotpot is simple: you rate places on
google.com/hotpot
—restaurants, hotels, cafes—and add friends on Hotpot whose opinions you trust. Then the next time you perform a search, Google will serve up personalized results, listing places based on your tastes, as well as recommendations from your friends.
We’ve watched Hotpot
grow
and
change
over the last couple months, and today Hotpot is really going places: to a Google search box near you and around the world.
You can now enjoy Hotpot recommendations in your regular search results on Google.com. So say you’re looking for a restaurant in Barcelona. Go to Google and search [restaurant barcelona]. If a friend has rated a particular restaurant, you might see their rating and what they had to say about it—as well as their
name
and photo—directly beneath that restaurant’s listing. To see all recommendations by your friends, click “Places” on the lefthand side of the page, and choose “Friends only.” Remember, you’ll need to be logged in to your Google account in order to see recommendations.
Seeing place recommendations based on your tastes and those of your friends across more Google searches will make results more relevant to you and maybe lead you to discover a new gem. If you don’t have Hotpot friends yet, you can invite them to share all the places they love with you by using the “Friends” tab on
google.com/hotpot
.
But Hotpot will only be half the fun if you can’t share it with all your international friends. So starting today, we’re making Hotpot available in
38 new languages
—including Chinese, French, German, Italian, Korean, Polish, Russian and Spanish—allowing people to share their favorite places in their native language.
Start rating and sharing recommendations with Hotpot everywhere, anytime: at
google.com/hotpot
, on
Google Maps
, using
Google Maps for Android
with an easy
widget
, and on our new
iPhone app
.
Happy rating!
Posted by Lior Ron, Product Manager
Let Your Hotpot Friends Help You Search on Google Maps
January 19, 2011
Most of us know lots of friends, each with very different areas of expertise when it comes to places to recommend. With the recent launch of
Hotpot
, we made it easy for you to see your friends’ ratings and reviews listed right inside search results.
While this is really helpful, and we’ve had a lot of fun with it, we often found ourselves wanting to see all recommendations by a particular friend for a particular search. Problem solved, thanks to a simple new feature we cooked up.
Say I’m searching on
Google Maps
for “italian restaurants” in New York. I’d probably trust my buddy Octavian’s recommendations over Bernhard’s (who is more of a hamburger guy, really). Now all I have to do, to see Octavian’s entire list of Italian restaurant recommendations in the city, is click on his name when he pops up in my initial search; this filters my search results to only those he’s rated and shows them on the map. It’s like I’m seeing the world, through Octavian’s eyes.
Getting a hand from a friend is even more helpful when I’m on the go. So now I can do the same thing in
Google Maps for mobile on Android
; clicking on Octavian’s name in my search results filters to show only his recommendations.
Add your friends (at least those with good taste) on
Hotpot
and encourage them to rate so you can explore their recommendations when you search on Google Maps.
Posted by Daniel Yehuda, Hotpot Engineer
Now available: Google Places with Hotpot for iPhone
January 12, 2011
We recently released Google Places with Hotpot in
Google Maps for Android
, and starting now, you can have that same great experience as an iPhone app. We realize the importance of finding places you’ll love while you’re out and about, no matter what mobile device you use. And Places with Hotpot not only helps you find places near where you are, it gives you the best places to go
for you
by personalizing your search results.
In case you aren’t familiar with
Google Places
, it lets you quickly search for places nearby and personalizes the results based on places you’ve rated. We get you started with a few popular search categories, but you can also tailor the list by adding your own favorite searches. This makes it fast and easy to find the best places for you with little fuss.
Use a default search category, save your own, or rate the nearest place quickly.
It can be pretty rewarding to discover a new place you love, but we also realize that there are some experiences you just can’t wait to share. So Places makes it super simple to rate a place with your iPhone
while you’re there
. Just fire up the app and hit “Rate now.” It will use your location to guess your current place and let you post a Hotpot review right from your phone. But it’s not just about getting to say what you think—the more you rate places, the more you’re sharing about your tastes and the more we can give you personally tailored recommendations.
Give your star rating and add optional details or a review so Hotpot knows your taste.
If you want to make things even tastier, just visit
google.com/hotpot
from your desktop computer. Here you can add friends to the mix and quickly rate all the places you already know. Once you’ve added friends, you’ll find your results seasoned not just with reviews from around the web and recommendations based on your own personal taste, but also with your friends’ opinions too.
Once you start rating and add friends, Places can give you personalized recommendations.
Get the Places app on your iPhone now by searching for Google Places in the App Store or going
here
.
This first version of Places is available for all iOS devices in English only. However, expect more features and improvements to roll out soon, including localization in many new languages. We’re hard at work to make Places with Hotpot more and more delicious.
Posted by Greg Blevins, Software Engineer, Google Hotpot team
Discover New Places From Your Hotpot Friends on Google Maps
January 11, 2011
(Cross-posted from the
Hotpot Blog
.)
When you need a great restaurant, hotel or pub, who do you turn to first for a recommendation? Your friends. We wanted to recreate that valuable exchange with
Hotpot
, our local recommendation engine from Google Places, which allows you to
add friends
whose opinions you trust and see their place recommendations right in your search results.
Because we find adding friends on
Hotpot
so valuable to the experience, today we’re excited to announce a new feature that makes it easy to stay up to date with the latest place recommendations from your Hotpot friends.
If you’re a Hotpot user, when you visit
Google Maps
on your desktop computer, you’ll now see a stream listing the most recent rating and review activity of your Hotpot friends.
Here’s what Maps looks like for me:
Keep in mind this feature is in beta mode, which means we’ll be building it out over time, making it even easier for you to keep track of your friends’ activities.
Visit
Google Maps
right now to discover that great new restaurant or bar you should check out this weekend. And be sure to thank the Hotpot friend who recommended it!
Posted by Octavian "Vivi" Costache, Hotpot Engineer
Trailblazing in Portland
December 9, 2010
[Cross-posted from the
Hotpot Community Blog
]
When we announced the availability of
Hotpot
last month, we knew from the beginning we were going to take a different approach to marketing the product and engaging with our users, both businesses and consumers.
To that end, we’re excited today to start testing this new approach by launching our first local marketing campaign in
Portland, Oregon
. Portland is a tech savvy, forward-thinking city with a history of innovation and some of the best coffee houses, microbreweries and parks in the country. Whether you know it as The City of Roses, Stumptown, P-Town, Rip City or just PDX, Portland’s thriving local business community and strong heritage of being a trailblazer made it a great choice for us to try something new.
So starting today and over the course of the next few months, we’ll be out and about in Portland. Here’s a taste of what’s in store:
Business Kits and Window Decals
Every day millions of people search on Google.com to find local businesses, and we want to make it seamless for standout businesses to get discovered online. To achieve this, we’ll be working directly with some of Portland’s top businesses to educate them about
Google Places
for business and all its benefits. In addition, to help these businesses spread the word, we’re providing owners with special
Google Places Business Kits
. These kits are a multi-flavored sampler of marketing materials that can help businesses get even more exposure, get them rated and reviewed online, and get more customers through their door. We’re already distributing these to some of Portland’s top businesses, but any business in Portland who has claimed their
Place page
can request a box.
A central part of the kit is the bright red “Recommended on Google” window sticker. This is not your ordinary sticker. Unlike others, this is an interactive sticker that has
Near Field Communications (NFC) technology
built right in, allowing people with cutting edge phones like the Nexus S to simply touch their phones to the sticker to find out more information about the business. Suddenly stickers are cool again!
Community Events
Sure, Hotpot’s about sharing recommendations with friends online. But we thought it’d be fun to take things offline. To kick things off, we’re partnering with Portland’s beloved
Voodoo Doughnut
. Because we at Google are such big fans of their
tasty treats
, we wanted to spread the love — so if you like doughnuts and coffee, be sure to stop by both locations starting this Saturday at 10am for a special treat.
Hotpot Jackpot
We’re also launching our second
Hotpot Jackpot
competition to encourage Portlanders to start rating the places they know and share them with friends and family. Everyone over the age of 18 who lives within a 50-mile radius of Portland can participate, and the top five raters at the end of the competition will win dinner for 10 at any restaurant in Portland, courtesy of Google. To kick things off, all of the fans at tonight’s
Trail Blazers vs. Magic game
will receive t-shirts announcing the competition and supporting the Blazers.
This is just the beginning and we’ll be doing a lot more in the upcoming months. For the latest and greatest of what we’re up to in Portland (and elsewhere), keep an eye out by staying up to date via the
Hotpot Blog
, and by following us on
Twitter
and liking us on
Facebook
.
Posted by Bernardo Hernandez, Director of Emerging Marketing
How Local Search Ranking Works
December 3, 2010
We’ve been quite busy this year working on
Google Places
,
Tags
,
Boost
, and our shiny new addition:
Hotpot
. With so many different products and features now available for local businesses, we wanted to take a step back and explain how the ranking of local listings works when people search on Google and Google Maps.
Product Manager Jeremy Sussman takes us under the hood in
this informative video
. Below are a few key takeaways, but we encourage you to watch the video, which features helpful examples and visuals.
Local search ranking refers to the placement and order of local information on a Google or Google Maps organic search results page. There are a variety of factors we take into account to provide you with results that match your local search, and three of the primary signals are relevance, prominence and distance. The best way to help potential customers connect with your business is to ensure that your basic company information like its name, address and phone number, are accurate, and then to add rich details like photos, hours of operation and more. You can do this by
claiming and verifying your business
via
Google Places
. However, claimed business listings do not receive any special ranking treatment over unclaimed business listings.
Google
Tags
and
Boost
are great online advertising solutions for local businesses. Tags make your organic business listings stand out on the Google and Google Maps search results page with a bright yellow marker that highlights specific attributes such as offers, videos or photos. And Boost is an effective complement to your organic Places listing because it quickly and easily creates an ad that can appear alongside the search results - giving your business additional exposure to people searching online. Neither of these advertising products available through your Google Places account affect the organic ranking of your business listing on Google or Google Maps.
Conversely,
Hotpot
- our new local recommendation engine based on ratings from you and your friends - can definitely affect the ranking of the local businesses you see in your organic search results. If you’re signed in to your Google account and have enabled Hotpot, you’ll get personalized recommendations based on the ratings you and your friends provided - making it easier for you to discover new places you’ll enjoy.
Posted by Brianna Brekke, Senior Strategist, Google Places
Video: How To Hotpot
November 30, 2010
[Cross-posted from the
Hotpot Community Blog
]
As you know, we
recently announced
the launch of
Hotpot
, our new local recommendation engine for Google Places, powered by you and your friends. In the following video, Mat Balez, a Google product manager, talks more about how to find the places you'll love using Hotpot.
Posted by Vanessa Schneider, Hotpot Team
Discover Yours: Local recommendations powered by you and your friends
November 15, 2010
There’s something so exciting about discovering new places. Nothing beats finding a great new place I’ve never been—whether it’s a new bakery with a special dessert, a hole-in-the-wall Mediterranean place I didn’t notice before or a local art gallery where I can let my imagination roam free.
The challenge with finding those great places is that each of us has different tastes. I want to find places
I
like and I want to find them quickly. So when I’m overwhelmed with possibilities, I turn to sources I can trust. For example, if I’m in a new city, I might chat with the concierge at my hotel and explain to him the kinds of places I like so he can give me personalized recommendations, or I’ll ask my friends for local recommendations because I value their opinions and we have similar tastes. But finding trusted advice is hard; wouldn’t it be great if there was a way for me to get these recommendations all the time, everywhere I go?
We are trying to do exactly that, and today we’re excited to share the first step: an early release of
Hotpot
- a local recommendation engine powered by you and your friends. With Hotpot, we’re making local search results for places on Google more personal, relevant and trustworthy. There are three main ingredients in the Hotpot recipe:
Google Places
- These are the
50 million places
around the world for which we have rich details.
The places you like
- When you rate places you like, we’ll tell you about other related places you’ll love. I love my favorite neighborhood restaurant in Noe Valley,
Firefly
, so when I rate it 5 stars, Hotpot will try to recommend other places
for me
in the city with simple, homey food such as
Home restaurant
.
The places your friends like
- Share your ratings with your friends and see the places they’ve recommended. I’m planning a trip to Barcelona for the holidays and my friend Bernardo is a local. With Hotpot, I can see his recommendations when planning my trip on Google Maps, or when I’m in Spain using Google Maps or Places for Android.
Combining these three ingredients makes the hard task of choosing where to go easy; all you need is to rate places and add your friends. To do that we created the
Hotpot rating app
: quickly rate all the places you’ve been to and choose exactly which friends you want to invite to Hotpot. Then, when you’re visiting places, you can continue rating on the go from
Mobile maps on Android
.
Rate from the Hotpot rating app
Rate from Mobile maps on Android
Your recommendations are with you whenever you need them. In search results, you can see recommended places by using the new
Place Search
and clicking on the “Places” filter. You can also see recommendations when searching on Google Maps, Google Maps for Android or when checking the
Place pages
for a specific business.
Recommendations on Place Search
Recommendations on a Place page
Recommendations on Google Maps for Android
You can set a Places nickname (
here’s how
) when you start using Hotpot, so you control how you post your ratings. That way, only your friends will be able to see your real name.
Happy hotpotting!
Posted by Lior Ron, Product Manager
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