Newsletter Article
February 2002
Where are Search Engines Going? Paid
Inclusion Trend Emerges
Mike Banks Valentine, Website 101
The Search Engine Strategies conference and show, sponsored
by AltaVista, Search Engine Watch and Internet.com on
August 16-17 provided a glimpse of several emerging search
trends; the biggest trend is toward “Paid Inclusion.” The
show, held in San Francisco at the Fairmont Hotel on Nob Hill,
provided a look at where search is headed.
Paid inclusion is the latest of several revenue producing
models considered by search engines as the cost of indexing
a much larger and more complex web increases and advertising
revenue declines. Several previously free search engines as
a revenue-producing move recently started paid inclusion quietly.
Virtually everyone scrambled for new business models when
banner advertising effectiveness declined steeply in 2001.
Search engines had relied heavily on banner advertising to
generate the only income they were seeing in sparse times.
When the tech economy took a nosedive in 2001, the justification
given by advertising companies for continued banner advertising
was now as a “Branding” strategy rather than a sales technique.
To satisfy investor demands for such absurd things as “profit”
the search engines began probing for new cash infusions and
realized that they could no longer rely on advertising to
support free submissions. Since nobody was looking at banner
ads any more (or at least not clicking through) support for
free search listing nearly disappeared.
Who benefits from search engines most? Those who receive
the traffic from searches. Simple. Who should pay for that
traffic? Those who gain that traffic. Simple. How do you charge
them?
Ah! Now things get more complex.
Goto.com was the first to introduce the novel idea
of charging businesses for traffic generation directly with
“Keyword Bids” starting at a penny per click-through. Now
companies began to bid for top positions knowing that being
at the top of the list was worth more traffic than being further
down the page.
Reaction to the CPC or cost per click model in 1998 was nearly
unanimous from the web community, especially while banner-advertising
revenues were still a viable business model for search engines.
It was, “You can’t charge for search listings! It’ll never
fly!” “Searchers won’t trust the listings they receive on
a pay-per-click basis because they are now ‘tainted’ with
commercial results!” At that time, in 1998, nobody believed
first, that people would pay for traffic and second, that
searchers would trust paid listings.
It very quickly became apparent after the decline in revenue
from banner advertising in 2000 and the dismal performance
of banners in delivering traffic that pay-per-click was actually
going to work for GoTo. At that point several new pay
for start-up PPC search engines adopted performance models,
and being first to market with the idea, GoTo dominated
the crowd.
It was then that the 900-pound gorilla, Yahoo stunned
the web with a $199 charge for a review of a commercial web
site. Wait, not $199 to be listed, but $199 to be LOOKED AT
by a reviewer. It was still not a guarantee of inclusion in
the directory! Search engines started thinking about that
and realized that Yahoo had the clout to demand money to be
reviewed, not listed, but reviewed.
While the major search engines stewed on the dramatic move
by Yahoo, they quickly realized that demanding money
to be reviewed would not work for them because they actively
sought out sites by sending “spiders” out to “crawl” the web
and index pages. Search engines wanted to be exhaustive in
their coverage of the web and catalog the entire thing, not
just the good sites, but also ALL of them!
When Google surpassed the 1 billion-page mark they
tooted loudly that they had indexed more of the web than anyone
else. This was seen as a milestone in search history and became
the goal of many of the top search engines. Let’s index the
entire web! That prospect becomes very expensive for search
companies and someone has to pay for it. But how? We can’t
all become pay-per-click engines if we want to index ALL the
web, because only a limited number will pay to be listed.
So they all stewed about it some more.
Meanwhile, several other directories followed the lead of
Yahoo and began to charge to be listed. It became accepted
at multiple directory sites, notably at LookSmart and
NBCi. Several special interest and topical directories
had been charging for listings longer, but directories that
listed everyone had a harder time justifying those charges.
Yahoo can do it because the entire world knows of Yahoo
and wants to be seen there. Vertical portals can charge because
they draw a very targeted searcher seeking specific businesses.
It’s worth paying for that targeted traffic.
When the goal is to index the entire web and results are
far less relevant and traffic less likely to result in sales
to the listed sites, how do you charge sites to be listed?
Hmmmm. The search engines said, “We’ve been getting complaints
about a couple of things from sites seeking listings, one
that they submit and never get listed, and two that when they
are listed it is only months later that they begin to benefit
from delivered search engine traffic.” AHA! An opportunity
presents itself to charge money to someone for listings!
Bingo! Paid inclusion is launched at Inktomi and becomes
an instant success with those who have been frustrated by
slow listing times and especially with those that can’t seem
to be listed at all at important engines. Here is a way to
get listed and get listed sooner; I’ll pay for that! But how
much? And are there any benefits above the free submission
to entice the reluctant web business into paying for what,
until now has been free. We’ll guarantee, not only that you’ll
be listed, but quickly, and to sweeten the pot, we’ll recrawl
your site on a weekly basis to guarantee fresh listings.
Now it’s time for everyone to leap into the new model and
begin more frequent crawls for preferred listees. Certainly
this will lead even further toward the commercialization of
the web, which angers many but is the only solution to supporting
the increasingly expensive proposition of providing complex
search to millions and indexing a dramatically larger web.
Time to innovate if you expect to attract those paid inclusion
listings. At Fast AllTheWeb, they’ve come up with an
intra-search facility that site owners with under a specified
number of pages can install as a branded, hosted search for
their own sites as an additional benefit. A hosted and branded
site search will likely cost them very little more to implement
for paid inclusion customers, while increasing revenue for
Fast. As Fast is a partner to the Lycos
network, this paid inclusion not only comes with intrasearch
for your site and regular site recrawls to keep search results
fresh, but also gets listings into the Lycos network
as well.
http://fastsearch.com/index.php?d=products&c=internet&s=partnersite
A further enhancement in the race to paid inclusion will
be extra cost “partner” or “sponsor” links that turn up at
the top of the search results pages. This may affect some
search partners differently than others as some now use GoTo
paid listings as those “sponsor or partner” links. Certainly
GoTo will fight to maintain current partners by making
themselves more attractive to those search engines considering
paid inclusion programs.
Inktomi has the larger partner list to support their
version of paid inclusion and is more attractive for distribution
and visibility, but offers little in the way of “perks” for
the value driven crowd. Altavista offers their own
version of paid inclusion, dividing the program into two separate
categories, one for small businesses and sites under 500 pages
and the other for the big boys of ebusiness with more than
500 pages to index.
http://www.inktomi.com/products/search/pagesubmission.html
http://www.altavista.com/sites/search/express_incl
Pricing is just now being determined by many search engines
making the paid inclusion move, but it ranges anywhere from
$30 per page to be listed up to yearly pricing models which
come with the additional benefits, such as the intra-search
option from Fast, AllTheWeb.com.
I recommend keeping an eye out for short-term sign-up bonuses
and perks as the paid inclusion model gains acceptance over
the next 6 months. Just as the pay-per-click model of search
took some time to gain traction, so too will paid inclusion.
Watch also for partnering changes in the near term as larger
networks battle to gain or maintain market share. Some will
be more aggressive than others so bargains and benefits will
no doubt emerge within 6 to 8 months to build customer and
brand loyalty early in the race to paid inclusion dominance.
Mike Valentine does Search Engine Placement for
the Small Business.
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