The reason for this is that the examples on the GoodRelations site are not yet updated to reflect the integration of GoodRelations into schema.org (simply because I did not yet manage to do that).
In order to understand this, you need to look at the history of GoodRelations:
http://wiki.goodrelations-vocabulary.org/History
GR started as an independent Web vocabulary ("ontology") and was designed to be used in RDFa or other RDF-syntaxes (like RDF/XML, Turtle, ...).
In 2009, Yahoo started to honor GoodRelations in RDFa syntax, and in 2012 Google followed. Note that this all happened in the original GoodRelations namespace, i.e. with identifiers like
http://purl.org/goodrelations/v1#BusinessEntity
After the announcement of schema.org in 2011, I worked with Google, Bing, and Yahoo to integrate GoodRelations into schema.org, which was completed and released in 2012.
This meant that (almost) any element from GoodRelations would now also be part of schema.org. So GoodRelations is now the official, extended e-commerce model of schema.org.
The result is that every GoodRelations element has now TWO identifiers:
a) the original one, like http://purl.org/goodrelations/v1#OpeningHoursSpecification
b) the one in schema.org, like http://schema.org/OpeningHoursSpecification
In some cases, the local part of the names differs between the original GoodRelations namespace and the derived version of in the schema.org namespace, in order to be consistent with the existing naming conventions in schema.org, or because a similar element had existed before.
For instance, an "Offer" is
http://purl.org/goodrelations/v1#Offering
in the original GoodRelations version, but
http://schema.org/Offer
in schema.org. But the two are the same conceptual element.
For a full list of naming differences, see
http://wiki.goodrelations-vocabulary.org/Cookbook/Schema.org#Naming_Differences
Now here comes the tricky part:
GoodRelations is supported by Google and Yahoo in its original namespace in RDFa syntax, but only in the schema.org namespace in Microdata or JSON-LD, and the support in its original namespace may be a bit out of date.
For enumerations (individuals), the original namespace remains the official one, i.e. all elements from http://www.heppnetz.de/ontologies/goodrelations/v1.html#individuals remain valid in the http://purl.org/goodrelations/v1# ... namespace, e.g. http://purl.org/goodrelations/v1#Cash.
This was chosen because we could reduce the number of new elements for schema.org by keeping the identifiers for values in the original namespace.
So when you are using GoodRelations for search engines, you should use it in the schema.org namespace. The http://purl.org/goodrelations/v1# ... namespace keeps being functional for RDF / Linked Data / SPARQL-based projects.
In the future (likely this year), there will be service update in GoodRelations which will provide
- updated examples to reflect this properly and
- mapping axioms so that Semantic Web applications will see the equivalences.
Hope that helps!
Best wishes
Martin Hepp
http://www.heppnetz.de