The name barely rang a bell among the 50 or so RSS feeds that I sift through each week on web search. (I should really cull that list down to ten.) When I looked up Bruce Clay, I realized that my Google pal was referring to a long-awaited paradigm shift in how Google serves up pages.
In a nutshell, this paradigm shift is supposed to have this effect:
1. Gradually but surely switch to something called Behavior Based Search.
2. Push out the pure e-tailers working from their parents' basement and drop-shipping product in their underwear.
3. Give hope and results to the long-suffering retailer.
4. Mean death to search engine manipulation of any kind.
5. Force those who have unfairly enjoyed high rankings to pay to keep their sites on the first page.
6. Reward high-quality sites that play by Google's rules.
Most Internet professionals know that Google has been planning a shift in its search engine's behavior for 2009, but maybe we aren't aware of how drastic this may be. It looks like traditional retail stores may be the big winners here as they re-calibrate the way people find sites through their pages....including tilting search results to include local companies first.
I'll dig into it in depth and corner my pal in Mt View to provide more concrete examples besides lame posts like this one. You can see what I'm getting at by searching "Intent based search" and "behavior based search" and "seo is dead" and "search wiki."
For the record, I don't think SEO is dead, but it will be radically different and I'm glad to see it. It will improve Google's product tremendously, which is why they're doing it, of course.
--chris