yahoo advanced web search

March 25, 2008

Nationwide Google Wireless ISP Plan, Try #2 :: Web 2.0 World!

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 9:34 pm

After they bid low and lost the C block of wireless spectrum Google has started talking to the media about using unlicensed whitespace. From the WSJ:

Google said that the white space, located between channels 2 and 51 on TV that aren’t hooked up to satellite or cable, offer a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to provide ubiquitous wireless broadband access to all Americans.” In addition, opening up the spectrum would “enable much-needed competition to the incumbent broadband service providers,” Mr. Whitt wrote.

Google has done its own white-space testing and submitted its results to the FCC in December. Philips also submitted a testing device to the agency last year, which returned satisfactory results.

Cheaper (or free) nationwide connectivity = more web users. More web users = more searches.

The other (big) piece of this, is that if Google works this deal, they will likely end up with a lot more usage data - and a strong starting point to triangulate other usage data against. With links becoming a commodity, how hard would it be for Google to find a better signal? In 5 years will they still rely on links and have 10,000 people rating content? What if they could somehow get everyone to start rating content (through usage data), and place more trust on natural looking Google user accounts with years of a natural usage profile. If they slowly mixed it into the relevancy algorithms over time who would even know they did it?

If Google does set up a free ISP think how much usage data they would have.

  • Google ISP (usage data, geo-specific relevancy)
  • Google Android (more geo-data)
  • Google accounts (which users can we really trust, what do they buy, etc.)
  • Google toolbar
  • Google search
  • social applications (Gmail, Google Talk, Orkut, Google Gadgets)
  • Google AdWords
  • Google Checkout (track sales volume, return requests, etc.)
  • Google AdSense
  • DoubleClick (thanks for the reminder Dan)
  • Google Analytics
  • Google Feedburner feed distribution
  • Google reader
  • iGoogle homepage (along with Google Gadgets)
  • Google YouTube (embeds, views, subscribers, etc.)

In that type of market, effective SEO morphs into marketing. Until that day comes keep link spamming building!


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Many SEOs Feel The Minus X Penalties Are Back Link Related :: Search Engine Marketing News

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 8:56 pm

Backlinks and Penalties PollA month ago I wrote, Google’s Matt Cutts Replies to -60 Penalty Thread at Google where I summarize how Matt said some links are hurting a particular site.

At that point, I decided to poll our readers and see if they feel that most of the “minus” X related threads and penalties are back link related or something else. Most believe the penalties are related to one’s back links.

Here is the break down:

  • 47% said Yes (50 responses)
  • 28% said No Idea (30 responses)
  • 25% said No (26 responses)

My personal feeling is that many of those perceived penalties have to do with the links to the site. Just a hunch.

Forum discussion continued at Google Groups.


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March 24, 2008

Niche Marketing and Link Building Resources :: Web 2.0 World!

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 3:43 am

Ann Smarty writes, "The best things about niche link building is that it is (1) highly effective, (2) looks natural, and (3) lets you find targeted audience and like-minded people who will then cite you and link back to your site."

50 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

March 22, 2008

12 Must-Have Tools for Active Digg Users :: Text Adds Do’s and Don’ts

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 4:52 am

Maki writes, "You really don’t need many tools when it comes to Digg, trust me. There are only a few which are truly essential. If you want to use Digg efficiently like a power user, try the ones in this list."

45 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

March 20, 2008

Slow Web Server Response is Eating My Homework :: Web 2.0 World!

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 6:14 pm

Posted by maruschka

I’m currently testing different SEO tactics on a new site that I built as part of a contest where I work. We were all given the same keyword to try to rank for, and at the end of 60 days, whoever is in the first position in the organic SERPs in Google is the winner. The only stipulations were that we had to buy a new domain, couldn’t use an existing one, and we couldn’t put any form of the keyword into the domain name. Oh yeah, and we couldn’t spend more than $50 outside of domain registration and web hosting.

My goal was to use only white hat tactics and it was all going great guns for the first couple of weeks. Of course, that’s because my site had the #1 and #2 positions. Then my web hosting company ate my homework. But I didn’t know it for several days. My site started slipping in the SERPs and my home page dropped out and other pages from the site showed up.

My first thought was that I had let several days go by without adding fresh content, and my competitors had painted a big target on my back.

I have since discovered that something happened with my web host, and the server that my site is on is now serving up my pages at a rate somewhat slower than pond water. Gah! If you ever wondered if slow server performance could really hurt a site’s rankings, I have the proof! Today only one page from my site remains in Google’s index, and it’s in 7th position.

However, when I checked my Dashboard, rather than telling me they dropped my pages from the index because my web server sucks, Google told me this:

google screencap from dashboard

They said they can’t reach my robots.txt. That’s probably because I didn’t have one. But when you click on the question mark, here’s their explanation:

google screencap from dashboard

Google says that my robots.txt file was unreachable, so they’re not going to crawl my site. Wait, what? They didn’t get a 404 error when requesting a robots.txt file, so they went away. And when did "roboted out" become a verb?

I’m moving the site to a new host today, but this web hosting company has probably caused me to lose the contest!

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March 19, 2008

Negative “Anti-Marketing” and Reputation Management for Affiliates :: Expert Advice on Web Site Optimization

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 2:49 pm

Running an affiliate program is incredibly dangerous for those concerned about their online reputation.By paying people to promote your product, you are giving your affiliates (and their competitors) direct incentive to create content about you and

29 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Search Landscape in The UK & Europe, SearchEngine Strategies NYC 2008 :: SEO Gods… Search Experts!

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 2:10 pm

As mentioned in part 1 of the “Search Around the World” Series, what do you do when your primary markets are hyper competitive, and increasing sales or marketshare is extremely difficult or expensive? Answer … expand to secure a presence in different countries.
In many cases, the economic and business climates of Europe and the UK […]
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

March 17, 2008

Spying on Google: What is Spam? What is Relevant? Read This to Find Out :: Adsense Marketing News

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 3:33 am

You can read a lot about what search engineers want by looking at how the search results change. You can learn a bit more by listening to how they try to guide / influence / manipulate the market while engaging in discourse. And you can learn a lot more by reading their guidelines for how they expect people to rate search quality.

The reasons that the internal communication documents are so powerful are

  • they do not discuss search from “in an ideal world” approach, but cover the current marketplace from a pragmatic standpoint solving real issues
  • the documents may display algorithmic holes that require manual intervention
  • the documents may show clues as to the hints search engineers give raters to quickly infer quality and relevancy
  • the documents show issues or relevancy infractions that merit a lower relevancy rating
  • the documents show how ratings change based on the quality and availability of information on the topic
  • how something that is considered spam in some instances is considered fine if it is associated with a large well known brand
  • how things that are relevant in some verticals are irrelevant in others if Google runs a competing offering
  • the current documents are the result of years of back and forth communication between quality raters and search engineers

For organic search junkies the Google Gods have tossed us another gift. An SEO Black Hat member discovered an April 2007 Google Evaluation Guidelines document, referenced here.

In April 2007 Yahoo! Music did offer lyrics, but the official Google query evaluation guidelines from that time-frame stated

Exceptions (Scraped Content that is not Spam) Lyrics, poems, ringtones (that the user programs rather than downloads), quotes, and proverbs have no central authority. When you see pages with this content, you cannot judge it to have been copied, and the pages should not be assigned a Spam label. Unfortunately, some content is written specifically for Spam pages and you will not find it on another source.

Although you may be convinced that the intent is to deceive, if the content makes sense and appears original, you will not be able to label such pages Spam.

In a sense, if a spammer or copyright violator is the only person providing the information online for free it is not considered spam, even if it would have been deemed spam by the traditional guidelines. The same is likely true if Google is trying to work on business negotiations to own that content directly (how could they state there are no central authority sites for music lyrics when sites like Yahoo! Music offer them?).

Because Google has not partnered up with the record labels to create a Google database of lyrics somehow those copyright violations are deemed acceptible even if they would have been judged as spam under Google’s typical guidelines. And, of course, after Google creates a relationship to get those lyrics hosted on Google.com, many of those lyrics sites will indeed be deemed as spammers.

In other words, spam is only spam if it does not help Google achieve its business objectives. Who cares about the laws. Good to know.

You can compare the current query evaluation and rater document to the 2003 versions I referenced here and here. And the 2007 document has been leaked online.

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

March 15, 2008

9 Essential Tactics For Reputation Management In Social Media :: SEO Gods… Search Experts!

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 3:55 am

Marty has a great post in Search Engine Land discussing 9 tactics for reputation management in social media.

Great post!

49 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Great in ‘08: Searchfest a Sound Improvement Over Last Year :: Link Marketing News

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 3:13 am

Posted by rebecca

Sorry for my noted absence lately. Last weekend I went up to Vancouver, BC, for fun times to be had, gained roughly 20 lbs from gorging at two seriously awesome restaurants, drove back down to Seattle, and promptly got picked up by Rand so we could drive further down to Portland for SEMpdx’s Searchfest 2008. On the way down I had the following experience with Rand’s smart phone:

Me: "We need to look up the hotel’s address."
Rand: "You can speak your inquiry directly into my phone and it’ll search for the address for you."
Me: "Whahh?! That’s amazing!" pulls up Live Seach.
Phone: "Type or speak location."
Me: "Hotel DeLuxe in Portland, Oregon."
Phone: "Did you say ‘Hotel DeLuxe’?"
Me: "Why, yes I did!"
Phone: "Did you say, ‘Portland, Oregon’?"
Me: "Yes, I did! Wow Rand, this is really cool!"
Phone: "Now searching for ‘Hotel DeLuxe in Portland, Oregon’ in and around Quebec, Canada."
Me: "Wait, what?"

Sigh. We were smart enough to keep heading into Portland vs. traversing through Canada. I had dinner with the Pole Position Marketing Crew, David Mihm (who’s been busy lately with his college basketball bracket website), and Matt McGee and his Marchex crew, while Rand dined with Vanessa Fox and Nate Buggia. After dinner, I pretty much collapsed in my room due to exhaustion from traveling all day (and stinkin’ like I-5, bleh).

The next day was full-fledged Searchfest. This year, the event was held at the Portland Zoo. Rand gave the keynote, which I thought went quite well. I’ve been to a lot of morning keynotes that are snoozetastic, but Rand displayed a lot of energy and excitement about his presentation, and his demeanor spread to the audience, who remained perky and chuckled every so often at various slides.

After Rand’s keynote I sat in on the Site Architecture, Usability, and SEO Analytics session. Stoney deGeyter talked about website architecture. Some of his tips included:

  • Use keywords in link text (keyword-relevant links)
  • Cross-link related products
  • Links should accurately reflect the information on the destination page
  • Duplicate content prevents effective spidering, as search engines can leave before spidering all important pages. Look out for secure/non secure pages creating dupe content, www vs. non-www versions, home page issues (site.com vs site.com/index or site.com/home), and tracking ids serving up the same content.
  • Make sure each page has a unique title tag
  • Not every page needs a description (head terms require a valuable description; long tail = not so much)

Next, Aaron Kahlow from BusinessOnLine talked about website usability. To summarize:

  • How does your website’s usability affect your site/brand/sales?
  • Common myths of usability include "I know my customer better than anyone," "Surveys = usability studies, so they should suffice, "and "Success is greater than satisfaction" 

He urged us to think about how customers view your site:

  • They’re on a single track mission
  • They find what they want, THEN peruse or browse
  • They have no patience; users are like when you have to pee on a long car ride–they display a gripping sense of urgency
  • They scan, not read

Lastly, Ian Lurie from Portent Interactive talked about analytics:

  • Analytics does not simply equal “reports”
  • Not having analytics = driving with your eyes closed
  • Search analytics = 5 step checkup: phrases, page views, time on site, bounce rate, and conversion
  • The time on site combined with the number of page views is the most useful data
  • Conversions are slightly overrated. CEO can obsess about conversion numbers, even though conversions can happen months after someone visits a site.
  • Onsite search = a missed opportunity. Try to track what your users are searching for and see if you can better offer it to them.

All three speakers did a great job and gave very engaging presentations. I was pleased with the information they provided.

Next up was the session I spoke on, Links: Development, Baiting, and Buying. Adam Audette provided a nice basic introduction to link building, then Dustin Woodward from Wetpaint dove in a little deeper and shared some good strategies for both internal and external linking. I spoke about link bait, which is currently one of my favorite topics to discuss because I think link bait is a fun subject and allows you to be really creative with various strategies. The Q&A was entertaining, and I’m happy to say that my presentation was a vast improvement over my first ever presentation from last year’s Searchfest. :)

After lunch, I sat in on the Marketing with Social Media session. Paul Colligan told us to focus on "S3" internet marketing, which is strategy, search, and social media.

For social media, he recommended having the following:

  • social media tools 
  • a subscription mindset 
  • a strategic delivery

He said that social media = an ubersyndication of:

  • spider food
  • multimedia
  • memes
  • attention

A search for "ubersyndication" had zero results at 4:28 pm on 3/5/08. He mentioned the word on Pownce, and one hour later it had five results. As of Monday it had over 80 results, and all of this was solely due to microblogging and social media mentions. Paul also mentioned that he gets a higher CTR on his Twitter tweets than his email marketing campaigns.

Lastly, Paul shared some of his favorite social media tools:

  • Twitter application in Facebook 
  • twittersearch.com 
  • socialposter.com

Dan Harbison from the Portland Trailblazers  talked about Internet marketing strategies for the Portland Trailblazers. He said that web 2.0 is all about conversation, and how you expand the voice from a few to that of many and put technology behind them. He created "I am a Trailblazerfan.com," a private social network, and promoted the site to Trailblazer fans. The result was that fans became much more engaged with the brand, and now the social network has the potential to be as big as the team’s official website.

Lastly, Sandra Ponce de Leon from BuzzLogic discussed advertising in blogs. She said that 57 million Americans read blogs, and 60% of those readers access blogs to explicitly get an opinion. BuzzLogic analyzes trusted link behavior to determine the following:

  • who is influential on any topic 
  • which audiences are paying attention 
  • reach of each conversation

Why focus ads on the “conversation”? 

  • to reach pockets of engaged audiences 
  • linking activity can tell you about your customers 
  • a conversational nature/tone can inform ad creative

Key tips for advertising in blogs:

  • understand the psychology of your user 
  • think about metrics/how engaged your users are 
  • look at the site’s copy; read up on the blog and see how these topics are near and dear to users’ hearts 
  • be smart and creative about how you can divert people’s attention

Afterwards, I attended Business Strategy & SEO and Small Biz SEM. I didn’t take notes, but I have to say that it’s always a pleasure to see Matt McGee speak publicly. He doesn’t change his demeanor one bit, whether he’s talking to an audience of one or one hundred. Matt speaks so effortlessly and is very comfortable and friendly with the audience. Good on ya, Matt!

The last session of the day consisted of Rand, Stoney, and Marty Weintraub from aimClear conducting site reviews on a few websites. It was entertaining and the speakers all provided sound advice and constructive criticism. The site review clinic was followed by a Searchfest mixer, where I met some lovely folks from Global Strategies. I also had a chance to chat with Syzlak a bit, which excited me because I dorkily love both his and SEO Hack’s ranty SEO blogs.

After the mixer Rand and I had dinner with the Searchfest organizers and a few SEOs. Marty gave me a lovely Introduction to Wine, thus dooming me to spend buttloads of money on various wines from here ’til eternity. Thanks a bunch, Marty. ;)

All in all, I have to commend SEMpdx for putting together an even better show than last year. The conference was quite nice and had a lot of knowledgeable and professional speakers, and I’m certain that attendees found Searchfest to be valuable. Thanks to the organizers for also treating me and Rand to dinner–we had a great time! In closing, I’m looking forward to attending Searchfest every year and watching it grow to become a great and valuable conference (and so I get an excuse to road trip with the Boss Man and pepper him with annoying questions for three straight hours).

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March 10, 2008

Caroline’s Favourite Links #13 :: Search Engine Marketing News

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 3:17 am

Strange, for the first time in ages I’ve kept on top of my blog reading and yet I’ve not saved that many links this week. Oh well, here they are…
12 CPM Alternatives for Adsense - We’re always told not to rely too much on one source of revenue and yet a lot of people still […]
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

March 8, 2008

SEO SWOT Analysis — Revisiting Marketing Models :: Blog-O-Sphere News

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 4:18 am

Posted by rishil

I work with mostly small independent sites with little or next to nothing budgets, and I help them turn things around (if possible). My biggest success story was a client who had 1 or 2 patients a week through word of mouth, and then grew to an average of 50 referrals through monthly online marketing, as well as a huge established practice.

I can’t take all the credit – he worked hard at building what he did and was good at what he did; all he needed was a decent platform to launch a starter kit.

So, how do you help such small sized businesses that operate in direct competition with the “big boys”?

Sometimes you need to get back to the basics and carry out a simple overview strategy of where the client is in the market place, and where they would like to be. In my experience, a simple SWOT analysis is a great starting point. It creates a grid for you to work from, and is simple enough for even the most unaware SEO/M clients.

For those of you who don’t have a marketing background, I will quickly outline what the SWOT acronym stands for:

  • Strength
  • Weaknesses
  • Opportunities
  • Threats

Usually Strengths and Weaknesses stem from internal (onsite, business operational, business resource) sources, while Opportunities and Threats are from external sources.

 Image source <a href=www.flickr.com/photos/ginosmit/2097319009/ original by www.flickr.com/photos/ginosmit/” src=”http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2228/2097319009_341a00675c.jpg”> 

Where does SEO/M fit in here?

Take, for example, Business X. They have a website that was built on Wordpress, they make use of category tagging, add at least one page of content every two days, and have excellent knowledge of their industry. Their domain name isn’t ideal, but it’s businessnameandkeyword.com.

But they do not get much traffic from search engines, while their rivals, Business Z, do because their domain name is set on theperfectkeyphrase.com. On the other hand, Business Z doesn’t have any SEO and relies on their main page to bring in all traffic, based on the strengths of the domain name.

There aren’t a lot of competing SERPs; in fact, they are below 50,000 for the core set of keywords. Business X’s site ranks on the second page of Google results for the top 10 results, while Business Z is on the top 3 positions, with Wikipedia and About.com taking up the top positions. Neither business does PPC, and the niche doesn’t have much room for other entrants (there may be 10 – 15 competitors). Both sites have similar links in terms of strengths and numbers. The businesses deal in emotional sales – the products can or may have emotions attached to them.

This is how I envision their SWOT to look like:

Hypothetical SWOT analysis for SEO possibilities

The above straight away suggests quick wins that the client can make, and where the priority would be. It also forms a great starting point for a long term strategy and tactical maneuvers.

I have kept this very simple and basic, but a decent SWOT picks up much more than the above, and it does require you to have analysed your client’s site, their main competitor/s, and the SERPs  vs keywords. This means the bigger the site, the bigger this exercise would be. This is why it’s ideal for small businesses, as the results are smaller and directly actionable / observable, with fewer affecting variables.

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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

Google Analytics Why Do You Make Me Distrust You :: Search Engine Tools

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 3:16 am

So I logged into Google Analytics this morning and I get the following message

Google Analytics why are you ruining it why? I always recommended to customers who don’t have an analytics package in place or were using sub standard analytics packages to switch to Google Analytics, without reservations, and for me to recommend Google’s products […]
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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

March 3, 2008

What Viral Marketing Is NOT :: Adsense Marketing News

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 3:10 am

We work very hard with our clients to determine not only if viral marketing is the right social media strategy for them, but also to determine which form their viral marketing campaign should take. In speaking with a client the other day about ideas

40 Vote(s)


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Search Engine Optimization is not an exact science. It takes lot’s of work and research. Trial and Error. Read through our posts here and try to learn from our experience. We offer some of our insight… news and comment. Please feel free to share your thoughts, and ideas. The site does allow "follows" so post your links.

March 1, 2008

Legal Issues, The Economics of Search, PPC Pitfalls, and the SMX Search Bowl :: Blog-O-Sphere News

Filed under: yahoo advanced web search — admin @ 4:48 am

Posted by rebecca

Yesterday I attended sessions, met some new folks, and attended Search Bowl. Below is a brief recap and my opinions of Day 1 of SMX West.

Recent Legal News About Search

Clarke Walton went over search ad trademark policies. Google has the easiest trademark policies to understand. They allow trademarks as trigger keywords, but trademarks in the ad’s text is not allowed. Both Yahoo and MSN do not allow trademarks as trigger keywords nor in the ad’s text. The only exceptions are if you are a reseller, an information site (not an affiliate site), giving product reviews, or providing dictionary terms.

Our very own Sarah Bird went over the legal developments on the Communications Decency Act, which inspired me to mention the CDA in my presentation on user-generated content that I’m giving at the end of the day today. I won’t go over her presentation because we can make her presentation available online and because she’s covered much of the information in her thorough and helpful Legal Monday posts.

Eric Goldman is up next, but I don’t have any notes because I got distracted by Digg (the downside of having free wifi available during sessions). Someone submitted a Drivl post I had written in November 2006 and it exploded on Digg, much to my surprise. The post, ironically titled "Why I’ll Never Make Digg Popular" (because I’ve never submitted anything that’s gone hot), was the #1 story of the day and currently has over 7800 diggs.

Videos, Images, and Blended Results

To me, the most interesting bit of this session was Todd Friesen giving an overview of the positioning of blended results in the SERPs. The placement typically follows this structure:

  • Image results = usually at top (occasionally at the bottom). They’re additive, meaning they’re displayed in addition to the 10 organic results you see.
  • Video results = the best example of blending. They can be in any spot in the SERPs, and they’re the oly result to be subtractive, meaning video results kick other results out of the top 10 in order to be displayed.
  • News results = top, bottom, or middle. They’re additive results.
  • Product results = top or bottom. They’re also additive results. 
  • Blog results = bottom of the SERPs; additive results.
  • Book results = bottom of the SERPs, additive results.

The Economics of Search

This was my favorite session of the day because each panelist is clearly very intelligent and had a lot of insight on the economics of the search industry. Michael Schwarz talked about how the most difficult question was the future of sponsored search. In his opinion, sponsored search’s main competitor is organic listings. Why do people click on search ads? Because the ads are good and informative. The guy willing to pay the most for your eyeball is likely to be able to tell you something good, right? Sponsored search is successful because, to Michael, organic search sucks. People can spam organic search like crazy, but it’s difficult to spam sponsored search. Someone will figure out how to make organic search beat the hell out of sponsored search, and when that happens, the business model will have to change. 

Hal Varian was up next, and he is so ridiculously intelligent that I leaned over to Jeff and whispered how I felt like a moron listening to his presentation. He’s like the economic strategist for Google, for crying out loud. He essentially gave a Micro Economics course in the span of 15 minutes, and every time I was just about to get the gist of an AdWords formula he had up on the screen, he’d briskly move onto the next slide, leaving me with half-finished notes. I eventually gave up and just typed "DOWNLOAD HIS PRESENTATION." Until that happens, here’s a morsel of notes:

  • Cost per conversion = acquisition = sale
  • Determine bid (theory).Profit = Value Per Click x Number of Clicks – Cost of Clicks
  • The profit increases if the value of the click is greater than the incremental cost per click (ICC)
  • Bidding Rule: if the value of the click > ICC, increase your bid. Stop when the value of the click is just less than or equal to the ICC.

Confusing but very valuable information (at least to me, anyway, but then again, I’m not a very quantitative thinker).

Peter Coles discussed the two sides of the marketplace, advertisers and publishers. He had some general takeaways:

  • Strong cross-side network effects in ad platforms make entry challenging
  • Try the "segmentation as an entry" approach and gain traction vertical by vertical
  • Differentiation, usually a powerful competitive force, can be a double-edged sword
  • The linear costs argument suggests that a combined platform may present advertisers with a viable competitive option

Lastly, Mark Mahaney shared some really cool data with the audience:

U.S. advertising outlook:

  • Forecasting 22% year over year growth in net advertising ($26 billion) in 2008
  • Internet 8.3% of total U.S. advertising; 1.22% increase in penetration
  • There were eRetail figures, but I missed them :(
  • 16% year over year growth in online travel to $106 billion in 2008
  • Online = 63.5% of total travel spending

Google’s search share continues to climb. Search budget shares are greater than search query shares.


Mobile search opportunity:

  • 35 monthly searches per installed PC worldwide in 2007
  • 1 search per mobile device per month in 2010 means you could generate $2.3 billion in mobile search revenue worldwide. 10 monthly searches means mobile search will be greater than PC search.

Peter also said that it’s hard to see the Microsoft/Yahoo deal not happening. In his opinion, Microsoft can’t accept a no from Yahoo. They will bid higher and this deal will happen. In the meantime, he addressed a few points regarding Microhoo:

  • Will Microhoo lead to a search query shift among consumers? (Probably not.)
  • Will a Microhoo research and development mashup create a better search engine? (Possibly, but he is skeptical.)
  • Could a larger #2 search engine draw search budgets away from Google? To him, this is an interesting question. It may incentivize more search buyers to fully allocate budgets to the #2 search engine, which is an interesting implication of Microhoo. Unfortunately, we won’t know the answer to this until the second half of 2009 or 2010, which is when a deal between the two search engines is likely to finalize.

PPC Pitfalls

Amy Konefal, Addie Conner, and David Szetela were all exceptionally good speakers, but I didn’t take notes because I was half-listening, half working on my laptop (again, damn you, free wifi! Who are the bastards that sponsored that, anyway? Oh, wait a second…never mind.) I did run into Gab Goldenberg (aka bookworm-seo), who seemed very thrilled to be at SMX West. He had spoken on an earlier PPC panel, and he seemed incredibly eager to chat with very industry types and expand his knowledge of SEO.


The Search Bowl That Did Not Bowl Me Over

After sessions wrapped for the day, it was time for the much-anticipated Search Bowl, which consisted of two reps each from Google, Yahoo, MSN, and Ask, and a team of two SEM All Stars (Todd Frisen and Ian Lurie) pitted against each other in a battle of SEO wits. On paper, this sounds nerdily exciting to anyone in the search industry. However, I have to admit that I was disappointed by the event for the following reasons:

  • Danny Sullivan, who I and virtually every other SEO on the face of this planet essentially love to death, was manic to the point of distracting. I guess he was really excited about seeing his Search Bowl idea finally come to fruition at a conference, but he showed it by screaming into the microphone (to the point where Rand went onstage and adjusted the mike for the sake of every audience member’s ears), screaming at the Search Bowl contestants, and just screaming in general.
  • The event wasn’t very well paced or structured. Some questions took forever, while others were clicked through at a whirlwind pace. There didn’t seem to be much communication between Danny and whoever was switching screens from the Powerpoint presentation to the video stream of the contestants, which often led to Danny reading a question at Micro Machine Man speed while the rest of us were shouting at him to stop so the question could get loaded up on the screen.
  • The questions, well, they kind of sucked. Who the hell is going to know in which month and year the big Wired article about Google came out? I totally side with Todd on this point–he kept shouting that "Nobody gives a shit!" about these obscure yet incredibly specific questions that were compiled. In fact, I’d argue that Todd was the most entertaining part of the Search Bowl. His exasperation of the structure and the questions and his insistence that the Search Bowl be turned into a drinking game had the audience laughing.

By the way, Google won, mostly because they answered virtually every Google-related question correctly (and there were a LOT). I think that if the Search Bowl were better structured and organized (and had better questions), it would be a lot of fun to attend. However, the inaugural Search Bowl seemed like it was fun for the people involved (the reps and Danny), but they seemed to forget that there were a couple hundred people watching their shenanigans. It’s like showing vacation slides to your family: "And then we went to the Grand Canyon. Boy, it sure is deep! *CLICK* Here’s us next to a cactus! Boy, it sure looks prickly! *CLICK*" You get the idea.

Anyway, that wraps up Day 1 from my perspective. Today I’ll be attending sessions, hanging out at our booth (stop by, pick up a t-shirt, and get a demo of our new SEO Analytics!), joining Jon Kelly for a WebmasterRadio piece, and presenting about UGC at the end of the day. I’ll report on all of this later today. In the meantime, if you’re attending the confernece, stop and introduce yourself!

Oh, two closing notes: the music between sessions is RAD. Kudos to whoever put together that mix–Modest Mouse, The Shins, Franz Ferdinand, Amy Winehouse, Jet–it’s like SMX tapped directly into my iPod.

Also, Will Critchlow has asked a question at every session I’ve attended. He is a One Man Show of question askin’. You totally know that he was that kid in your class who shot his hand up every two minutes, much to the teacher’s chagrin. ;)

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