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The Marketleap
Report
Volume
IV, Issue #3, March 4, 2004
A
Marketers Guide to Search Engine Marketing
and Staying Alive
in 2004 - Part Two
by
Keith Boswell
In
the first part of our two-part guide to staying
alive in 2004, we talked about understanding keywords
and the major avenues to be aware of for getting
into search engines. This issue we focus the light
more closely on the biggest search engines you
need to know about, their position in the market
and how you can use the knowledge you have for
each of them.
Overview
of the Major Search Engines
- Google
- Yahoo (Overture,
Inktomi, AltaVista and FAST)
- MSN
Google
Big surprise here, Google is going to IPO sometime in 2004. Recent statements
by Google's CEO Eric Schmidt play down rumors it could happen in a few
months, but if Google is wise it should go public as soon as possible.
Google is confident in its cash position right now and doesn't feel it
has to have an investment from the public to succeed. But their strong
pay for placement product, Google AdWords, and their out of the gate profitability
would likely earn them the market capital they're going to need to survive
the next twelve to eighteen months.
With
the coming heat poured on by Yahoo and MSN, Google’s
biggest challenge is going to be finding ways to
stay in people’s mind. Just having their
search tools, and their distribution network won’t
be enough. Now that Yahoo has pulled Google search
results out, Google's biggest distribution partner
is AOL. And AOL is a dying bird. People are leaving
that nest faster than they can find free replacement
disks at Home Depot and Lowe's.
Experimenting
with services like free news, and potentially free
email, isn't going to be enough for Google to maintain
its current share of the search market. MSN and
Yahoo are ahead of them in total traffic and growing
their user base one application at a time. Search
as a stand alone won't be enough for user lock-in,
and what else could Google really move into – operating
systems and custom content creation? That's not
going to happen.
If
you've ever interfaced directly with Google, there
are signs that they don't have the people skills
to grow beyond their perceived potential. Have
you been to the Google booth at a conference and
tried to talk to them about anything other than
AdWords? "Good luck" and "Thank
you no" are what you'll find from one of the
world’s leading search companies.
It's only been very recently that Google seemed to discover search engine
marketers and begin to interact with them.
Google
has said they won't move into paid inclusion because
they feel it violates the trust of their users.
If you're not in Google's organic results, or you
are but performing poorly, the only choice you’ll
have if you want traffic from Google is to jump
into pay for placement auctions with AdWords. Get
your keyword lists ready and your credit card out.
To
succeed with natural search engine marketing at
Google, marketers need to focus on creating and
maintaining content rich websites that people will
link to naturally. Building and continually enriching
a quality site should be your biggest focus. Paid
placement should only be on your to-do list if
your site is good at converting visitors and you’re
a good copywriter who can deliver good click through
rates for your ads. Remember, you need to know
the keywords that you are buying are going to produce
tangible results. If you're just guessing, you're
going to waste money and have plenty of questions
later.
Yahoo (Overture/Inktomi/FAST/Altavista)
Yahoo should be the search behemoth of 2004 and they also have the most to
gain in 2004. With all of their acquisitions from 2002 and 2003 coming
together, they will make the largest jump amongst all of the major search
engines this year. They have officially dropped Google and replaced it
with their own proprietary Yahoo! Search, a move many did not expect. Most
people thought they would simply use Inktomi's index as the lead, but it
has proven to be Inktomi Plus.
Yahoo's
steady momentum of adding new services and increasing
their value to their users is paying off. They
have spent the last few years growing the popularity
of Google's search technology. 2004 is the year
Yahoo is grabbing back their rightful share of
being search royalty. Because Yahoo has combined
the leading paid inclusion programs from Inktomi,
FAST, AltaVista and they own one of the two largest
pay-for-placement networks with Overture, they've
got quite an arsenal to wield.
Yahoo
is embedding itself with small business users and
individuals who rely on their variety of business
critical activities like e-commerce, personal finance,
email, chat and more. Yahoo also has the biggest
advantage in 2004 because it’s the primary
driver of MSN search. Overture's sponsored results,
and Inktomi's organic results now represent the
lion's share of space in MSN search results for
the foreseeable future. This means Inktomi and
Overture power two of the three largest search
portals on the Web today.
Yahoo's
biggest challenge will be justifying their new
paid inclusion program, Overture Site Match, as
a legitimate, untainted service. Some people feel
that paid inclusion must influence a sites position
in organic search results because they are paying
to get in.
Yahoo's
best move is that they are repositioning paid inclusion
by leveraging Yahoo's already intensive editorial
review, so that the inclusion program becomes a
seal of approval from Yahoo that the content can
be trusted. The public trusts Yahoo enough to use
them everyday and Yahoo’s endorsement could
go a long way to legitimizing the program.
To
be successful with Yahoo! Search, you're going
to need to focus on your site being of the highest
quality as possible, just like Google. The major
difference for you is that there are several paid
methods for getting your pages listed and being
found at Yahoo. If you have to be at the top of
search results, you can buy your way in through
Overture. This is very similar to Google AdWords,
so you'll need to know what words you're buying,
how much they mean to your businesses success,
and you’ll need to optimize your website
to convert visitors into customers.
You
also have options through Overture Site Match,
the new paid inclusion program that ensures your
pages are available to people searching in the
index that powers search results in Yahoo! Search
and other search partners. You should have already
received a special issue of the Marketleap Report
that contains more details about this new program.
MSN & Microsoft
2004
is MSN's beta year for search. Their web crawler,
in-house index and search toolbar are all in beta
at the present. MSN is finally gearing up to come
in line with mother Microsoft closer than ever before.
Bill Gates is beginning to talk about search as a
concept the way he did about browsing the Web before
Internet Explorer was released.
With
Microsoft's next operating system looming somewhere
around 2006, search will become a vital piece for
tying together all of Microsoft's vast reach. Searching
for information on your local computer, trusted
people like your parents computer in Texas, and
the rest of the Internet from one search bar will
likely be located conveniently in Windows.
You
cannot underestimate Microsoft and MSN's ability
to turn 2005 into a year of learning as they go
live with their own proprietary search technologies
and prepare for the launch of the new OS. Their
ability to adapt and push the technology market
in directions they choose is unheralded. It was
just recently publicized that Microsoft just lost
their chief commercial/paid search that had come
over from Overture. This should prove but a minor
road bump for Microsoft to figure out how to cash
in on search, especially as they sit back and watch
Yahoo.
Yahoo
and Google will feel the heat once the sun at Microsoft
shines fully upon them. Until then, MSN will spend
most of 2004 basking in the profits from their
deals with Overture for paid placement results,
and Inktomi for their web results. Expect to hear
more from Microsoft towards the end of the year
when some of their investments in proprietary
technologies begin to take shape and their
vision for search integration is better defined.
If
you are looking to get into MSN's search engine,
see details up above about getting into Yahoo,
as Yahoo is the primary driver of all search results
at MSN with Overture and Inktomi.
These
three search properties represent over 85-90% of
all people searching and so they warrant the majority
of your attention. But there are other search networks
available that can produce traffic and additional
exposure above and beyond the Big Three. We'll
use a future report to give you information about
some of the smaller companies in the search market
like Ask Jeeves, FindWhat, LookSmart, Infospace,
Enhance (formerly Ah-Ha) and others that you
need to know about and understand.
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