News
From StepForth Search Engine Placement Inc.
Wednesday, July 9th, 2003
Dear valued subscribers,
Welcome to StepForth’s weekly search engine update. This update
is a weekly news summary designed to bring our subscribers up to speed
on the constantly evolving search engine marketplace.
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| Highlight
of the Week: Overture and MSN Put the
Heat to Google's Feat |
| Time is a relative dimension, especially when it is measured at the
speed of light. (Apologies to uncle Albert) It is amazing how much
can change in only six months. It is said that a year on the Internet
is like five years in the non-digital world. The past six months
have brought so many changes to the search engine world it has been
difficult to keep up. The next six months may well revolutionize
the industry.
About four years ago, Google emerged as the search engine of choice
for experienced Internet users. Using the simple but effective
concepts that search engines should be fast, clean and more democratic,
Google’s founders created a tool that would compile the greatest
cache of knowledge ever created by humans and find unique pieces
of information within that cache in mere seconds. The success of
Google has literally changed the way people use the Internet and
has made searching for information the second most useful Internet
application after Email. Google’s success has also redefined
the financial sector of the IT economy with the largest corporate
entities in the world desperately trying to either catch up to
Google or cause Google to trip on its own path. Combined with Google’s
recent five-month algorithmic upset, these strategies are starting
to pay off. Google is losing its luster in the eyes of search engine
users and starting to lose clients and confidence to both Overture
and MSN.
MSN has recently announced it is compiling its own search database,
largely based on the trail Google blazed four years ago. MSNBot
is already spidering its way across the entire web, following every
link it finds and absorbing all the information it can find into
that database. With the seemingly unlimited resources at Microsoft’s
disposal, it is a safe assumption that they will soon present the
Googleplex with the greatest challenge it has ever faced. Microsoft
is also leveraging its deals with Google’s other major competitor,
Overture in order push Google out of emerging markets such as South
Korea, Italy and Germany.
Meanwhile, the camp at Overture is celebrating a series of wins
at Google’s expense. Overture’s deal with MSN extends
its search services on MSN sites internationally until December
2004. Overture has also pulled other contracts away from Google
including being the search tool of choice for Freeservers-UK, the
largest ISP in Britain. With the recent purchase of FAST and AltaVista,
Overture has the ability to offer algorithmic search results and
is working to relieve Google of it’s responsibilities with
as many ISPs as possible. Overture has recently solidified its
relationships with MSN and Yahoo, deals that will account for approximately
2/3 of Overture’s annual income.
Google has spent the last six months improving its search results
by working on, live testing and live tweaking a new ranking algorithm.
This period saw increasingly unreliable results appearing on Google
including a great deal of SPAM and inaccurate references offered
on Google’s search engine return pages. Six months is an
awfully long time on the Internet and the coveted user-loyalty
that sustained Google as the search-king has begun to wane. While
Google seems to be getting back to presenting highly relevant results
that remain the same from day to day, users are starting to migrate,
many to Overture’s newest properties, AlltheWeb.Com and AltaVista.Com.
The engineers and planners at Google seem to have bet the farm
on presenting the best possible search results, which is to be
expected from the World’s leading search engine but, in the
eyes of many professional webmasters, business owners and search
engine optimizers, the past six months have been too upsetting
and unstable.
What a difference half a year makes. Next year should be even
more interesting, especially if Google issues its long-anticipated
IPO.
|
| Major
Player Update: Yahoo Returns to Profitability! |
Later this afternoon, Yahoo
will issue its quarterly earnings announcement and it looks
so good that financial analysts are using it as proof that
the Internet advertising economy is well on the road to
recovery. With revenues predicted between $295 million
and
$320 million and earnings in the $85 - $95 million range,
any shareholder who has held on over the past three years
will find a tidy reason to feel rewarded. Yahoo has concentrated
its energies in three major arenas over the past twelve
months. It has overhauled its sales department, invested
heavily
in search technologies and refocused on serving large entertainment
entities such as movie studios and the music industry.
Jupiter Research analyst Gary Stein was quoted on Internet.Com
saying, "Yahoo!
is one of those few that are bellwethers of the market. You
look to those, and even though they get the lion's share
of the online advertising money, it's a sign that money is
being put back into online marketing, some of it through
new channels like search engine marketing." The online
advertising market is expected to grow into an $8.1 billion
market by 2006 and, if Yahoo’s stock share price is
a real indicator, that growth may happen faster than expected.
In the past six months, Yahoo’s share price has increased
by over 100%!
|
|
| In the Client Spotlight this
Week:
Travel Butler UK Travel Specialists |
Your UK Travel experience starts
here. We are determined to make sure your stay exceeds all your
expectations, and we know exactly how to achieve this.
As Europe’s
largest city, London is host to more than 25 millions visitors
a year; yet, there is always time for tea and a leisurely
stroll through London’s famous parks and boroughs. The Travel
Butler can make your trip to London easy with a dozen different services
to offer visitors including discounts of up to 70% on London
Hotels. Popular destinations abound including theatres,
concert halls, shops, restaurants, sports venues, world famous hotels,
landmarks and hundreds of restaurants with a variety of cuisines
from around the world. Don’t worry if you don’t know
where to start, the Travel Butler recommends plenty to keep you busy
with personalized itineraries! Visit www.travelbutler.co.uk
|
| Weekly Quick Tip: Learning the
Habits of Your E-Com Clients |
| There is another digital revolution
brewing, the outcomes of which could place your business in the
foreground or bump your business to the background, depending on
how you play your cards. According to research being conducted
at the University of Alberta by business professor Paul Messinger,
businesses must do better at understanding how consumers shop online.
Messinger’s research, which involves six other Canadian universities,
is being funded by an $865,000 grant from the Canadian government.
Messinger believes that, like in the ‘real world’,
Web shoppers return to sites (stores) they’ve learned to
navigate through and are comfortable with. “If you’re
like a normal person, you go to no more than a dozen sites for
shopping”, said Messinger. People do surf for information
but tend to do less exploring once they’ve found a trusted
source that meets their needs. He also points out that they “use
web sites to build a sense of community among customers -- and
encourage brand loyalty”, making the web a natural extension
of the business’s brick-and-mortar operation. Virtual businesses
tend to do better when they arrive early in the game such as Amazon
and Travelocity.
Knowing Internet user’s habits can make your
site successful and save your business a great deal of money in
development and experimentation.
Watch for snippets of Professor Messinger’s findings to be
released slowly over the next three years of his study.
|
| The Net Reality:
SCAM ALERTS!!! |
Crime is an unfortunate reality of everyday life and has obviously
moved onto the Net. We have two major SCAM ALERTS to issue today,
one of which is frighteningly sophisticated, the other of which
is frighteningly simple.
IDENTIFICATION THEFT: Customers of Best
Buy, AOL and Earthlink have been targeted by “Phisher Sites”.
Phisher sites use deception to fish for your personal financial
information
such as credit cards and social security or social insurance
numbers. In the case of Best Buy, an email sent to hundreds of
thousands of Best Buy online customers directed the recipients
to a web site that looks very much like the Best Buy site. The
email said it was a “Fraud Alert” and asked people
to supply their credit card numbers and information for file
verification in order to better deter online fraud. The FBI are
investigating but have no idea how many customers in Canada,
the USA, France and Australia where stung.
FAKE DOMAIN RENEWAL
NOTICES: The second scam we’re warning about today
is a variation on the unsolicited invoice scam. There are about a dozen rogue
firms spamming websites owners saying it is time to re-register their domains.
In some cases, it is a company trying to trick domain holders into switching
registrars. In other cases, it is an entirely bogus company that is simply taking
the money of those who are unsuspecting. Either way, the actions are illegal.
If you receive a notice of domain renewal, please read it very carefully and
if you have even the slightest doubt about the document, call your ISP or your
domain registrar to see if they can help. Don’t automatically send any
money based on a domain re-registration invoice before checking it out thoroughly.
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If you have any questions please
do not hesitate to call the StepForth staff:
Toll-Free: 1-877-385-5526 | Local: 385-1190
http://www.stepforth.com
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