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08.09.05
Messageboards, A Great Resource But Be Ready By
David Utter
Chris Richardson of WebProNews sat in for the Search Engine Landscape session
at the SES 2005 conference, and found out local search blurs the line between
fixed content and dynamic results.
Who's the real power in the online search market? Do local searches
bring you business? Let
us know what has worked for you in the WebProWorld forums.
Those local search visitors tend to be female, affluent, and concerned about the
weather. In the session, speakers James Lamberti from comScore and Bill Tancer
from Hitwise took a look at several search engines, and found Google and Yahoo
getting the lion's share of local search traffic.
The speakers made a point of discussing local search being the most important
area in respect to search engine growth. Making a search engine as invaluable
today as the Yellow Pages were in pre-Internet days for local users will drive
that market. According to the speakers, 13 percent of all searches relate to queries
for local data.
The two major portals, MSN and Yahoo, get a lot of their traffic from outside
of search queries. That seems to be in line with their philosophies, where they
have created sites that are as much a destination as they are a mechanism, like
Google, to get to a place online.
By the numbers, searcher growth year to year has been around 9 percent. Search
activity has jumped by 27 percent since 2004; greater broadband penetration into
the Internet user base has translated into more online activity, and more search
traffic.
In the session, the speakers made an observation about Google and Yahoo. Google
has been gaining market share, and has been doing so at the expense of Yahoo.
That may explain why Yahoo has been pushing to expand its services to mobile phones;
Yahoo also has to be concerned with AOL and its new transition to portal status,
complete with mobile handset service strategy.
Toolbars offer search users some excellent features. The past activities of spyware/adware
companies have left many users wary of toolbars, though. But Yahoo has almost
half the market share of toolbar users.
Overall, the speakers note Google dominates the search landscape. Worldwide, the
Mountain View-based Googleplex is home to the largest share of search engine activity.
In Germany and the UK, its share of the market rests at nearly 80 percent.
Site owners will want to be very aware of Google and its position in the search
market. Local searching will grow thanks to the usefulness of maps integrated
with search results, offered by Google, Yahoo, and MSN. Businesses with a local
as well as an online focus should ensure their local Yellow Pages information
remains up-to-date to take advantage of those searches.
About the Author:
David Utter is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business. |