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Ranking The Search EnginesView the internet marketing guide below so you can better your rankings in the search engines. If you are interested in cheap web hosting, reseller hosting, a dedicated server, a virtual private server, ecommerce hosting, a managed dedicated server, windows hosting , coldfusion hosting or a colocation service, please select the category and a list of web hosting providers will be displayed.. |
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Ranking The Search Engines We can each spend so
much time concerned with how our website/s are ranking on the Search
Engines… Let’s step back for a minute and look at how
the Search Engines themselves are ranking. Where are people, our
customers, searching? Which Search Engines are delivering the bulk
of results? With answers to these questions we can re-focus our
efforts to ensure that were not wasting our time trying to gain
exposure in the wrong places.
There are two ways we can rank the search engines. The first, is in terms of Popularity; the number of people that are using the search engines to find products, services and information. The second, and perhaps most important factor from a marketing point of view, is Audience Reach; the number of search portals that a Search Engine is showing its results through each day, thereby reaching the maximum number of people. First, lets look at Popularity. The following search engine popularity figures were compiled by Neilson/NetRatings, a provider of digital audience information and analysis. This company monitors over 225,000 individuals in 26 countries to gather its Internet usage results. In October 2002, Search Engine Popularity in the U.S. was as follows: Google 29.2% Yahoo 28.5% MSN 28.1% AOL 19.7% Ask Jeeves 10.3% Netscape 5.5% Overture 5.4% InfoSpace 5.1% AltaVista 4.4% Lycos 4.4% LookSmart 3.0% Earthlink 1.8%(source: Search Engine Watch) These figures tell us a lot about search engine usage; where people are going to find their information. But what they don’t tell us are more important facts about how widespread each search engine’s listings are across the Internet as a whole. Let’s look at this from a marketing perspective. Most major search engines have agreements in place with each other and with different search portals to display their results. This means that their Audience Reach is actually much larger or smaller than the Neilson/NetRatings results suggest. Although actual figures are hard to determine, here’s how the search engines rank from the perspective of Audience Reach: 1. Google Every web user, in
every country, has access to Google’s search results. As well
as providing results via its own search pages, Google supplies search
results to Yahoo, AOL, Ask Jeeves, Netscape, EarthLink and AT&T.
Search services InfoSpace, IWON and Simpatico.ca (Canada) also display
their 2. Overture (formally GoTo.com)
Overture is a pay-per-click search engine. Its audience reach is
also extremely wide. Overture’s top three search results are
displayed as the premier listings on Altavista, MSN, Lycos, AllTheWeb(aka
FAST), Excite and Go.com. Its results are also displayed on hundreds
of 3. Inktomi Inktomi is not a search engine as such, but a database comprised of paid listings delivered to its search partners. Inktomi results are usually displayed on each of its partners sites as secondary search results. Its listings are displayed at: MSN, LookSmart, About.com, HotBot, Overture, espotting.com (Europe) Terra.co(Spanish network), goo.ne.jp (Japan) 4. FAST(AllTheWeb) FAST Search results power the listings at the popular Lycos search portal. Lycos has the largest global footprint of any Internet portal with more than 140 sites in 41 countries through its network of Web sites and partnerships. FAST results are also displayed at Lycos Europe, Ask Jeeves, AllTheWeb, WebCrawler, InfoSpace, Excite, DogPile, MetaCrawler and other international partners. 5. AltaVista Altavista is a pure
search engine. As well as displaying Overture’s results, Altavista
maintains 20 6. Open Directory (DMOZ) While
this directory does not even factor in the Neilson/NetRatings results,
its audience reach is significant. The Open Directory provides main
search results to Netscape Search as well as categorized directory
results at AOL, Google, Lycos and HotBot. Google regards a listing
in the Open 7. LookSmart A listing at LookSmart will enable your site to be dispayed at the very popular MSN – the default search portal of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser. Google also regards a LookSmart listing highly in its PageRank system, which will in turn help your site’s ranking at Google. 8. Yahoo A listing in Yahoo’s
directory has become less significant since they began to use Google
search results as primary listings. If you rank well on Google,
you will rank well at Yahoo and gain the first rate exposure this
popular search site provides. Google regards a listing at Yahoo
as highly significant in terms of PageRank, so a listing here will
in turn help your site’s relevancy with the Google search
engine. What 9. Ask Jeeves/Teoma Ask Jeeves search results are powered by Teoma. While this search portal is popular amongst Internet users, its reach is not that significant. If your aim is to have your site listed on all the major search engines, then this would definitely be one to be listed with, although you may want to focus your efforts on gaining a high ranking on the other more significant search engines above for maximum traffic. Ask Jeeves dispays the top four results from Google’s AdWords and ad results from Lycos in a right hand column format. What we can construe from the above results is that the majority of Internet search results are delivered by a small minority of search engines through a wide network of partner search portals. When planning your search engine positioning campaign, it is important to consider this. If you begin with the idea of maximum audience reach in mind, your results will return a wider net of targeted traffic. About the author:
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