StepForth Web Marketing Inc.
Your Weekly Step Forth into the World of Search Engines
Wednesday, September 28th 2005
Highlight of the Week
Search Engine Advertising Choices >>
The Major Players
Google Takes Backhanded Bow Out >>
Global Search Engine Popularity Stats >>
The Net Reality
The Power of Blog >>
Images not loading? - View the online version
This could be a result of your Outlook settings

Visit the StepForth Placement Homepage

StepForth's News Section
StepForth's latest search engine placement services
StepForth now contributes articles to both
Search Engine Guide and Web ProNews
Do you want to hear about the news as it comes?
The SEO Blog is our daily events post.

Highlight of the Week

Search Engine Advertising ChoicesSearch Engine Advertising Choices

Search advertisers are offered two basic marketing models, paid-ads and free organic ads. While there are advantages and disadvantages to both models, one clearly stands out as a better advertising option than the other. Why is it then that advertisers from small business to mega-corporation tend to show higher interest in the more expensive and least effective of the two?

Most SEOs speculate that advertisers understand paid-advertising better than organic placement. As much of search marketing is conducted in-house and optimization is a learned-skill, corporate marketing departments lean towards the very simple model of paid-search. Organic search engine placement continues to be perceived as a nebulous service that can take time to show results. On the other hand, paid-ad placements tend to show up minutes after they are established and bidding one's way to top spot is relatively easy.

With search ad-spends sometimes topping five or six figures per month, many SEOs shake their heads at businesses that refuse to invest a much smaller (generally low to mid four figure) sum on organic optimization. Ranging from small to mega sized operations, the number of paid-ad advertisers that ignore organic optimization seems to be growing.

Over the past three years, independent research has consistently confirmed that search engine users tend to click on the center column organic (free) ads far more often than on paid ads. Earlier this year, search marketers benefited from a number of published studies that clearly demonstrate the higher value of organic placements. While the results of this research is easily available to all, traditional and tech media stories tend to focus on paid-search advertising.

Two studies that made an enormous impact on the search marketing field this year are the Eye Tracking research conducted by Enquiro CEO Gord Hotchkiss and a whitepaper published by Lisa Wehr, CEO of OneUpWeb titled, " Target Google's Top Ten to Sell Online ." Gord's study shows the basic F (or triangular) shape search user's eyes tend to follow when examining search results. Lisa's study found that search users are up to 6X more likely to click on the first few organic results as they are to choose any of the paid results.

A third study, " Accurately Interpreting Clickthrough Data as Implicit Feedback " , released earlier this week by Cornell professor Thorsten Joachims looked at the links users found on search engine results pages and questioned why they choose which link. The results show again the importance of high organic search engine rankings. The researchers asked subjects to perform searches and looked at which results they viewed, which they clicked on, and what happens if those links are mixed up.

The Cornell study found that search users tended to view (look at) the first five organic results with a high percentage of them (approx. 2/3) viewing the top two listings with 42% of them selecting or clicking on that link. The number of search-viewers halves to approximately 1/3 of users viewing sites appearing in positions 3, 4 and 5. The numbers drop to about 1 in 10 users tending to view the 9 th and 10 th placed sites.

When a search user views search listings, it doesn't necessarily mean they click on those listings. In this context, to view means to examine. Users tend to examine the text used to phrase the reference link as well as the descriptive paragraph appearing beneath the link before deciding to click on it. This is especially true for the smaller number of searchers who view listings found in the 3 rd to 10 th positions as users who examined those listings tended to spend more time on the results page before choosing the link to click first. In other words, 1/3 to 1/10 of users are conducting preliminary research by seriously reading the text used to phrase the results before clicking.

This finding was backed up in another part of the Cornell study that showed when the same Top2 results were reversed, the text used in the link and description had a notable influence on which link the user clicks. The research found that when results were switched around, 34% of the users would still click on the site ranked in first place, even when they had seen the now #2 site there earlier.

In his Alertbox review of the Cornell study, Jakob Nielsen succinctly notes, " If users always clicked the best link, then swapping the order of the two links should also swap the percentages, and this didn't happen. The top hit still got the most clicks."

These findings led the research team to suggest there are two biases playing out in the minds of search engine users. The first is the Trust Bias, which leads the searcher to believe that a site ranked in the number 1 position is there because it must be the best reference for that keyword. The second is the Quality Bias, which considers the text used in the results to determine which is the best site to choose from.

For search engine marketers and more importantly, search engine advertisers, there are two glaringly obvious implications.

First of all, it is extremely important to be found at the Top of the search engine results. Being in the Top10 is likely sufficient for many businesses but the sites getting the most business are found at the top. To further these findings, Gord and Lisa's research clearly shows that searchers are choosing organic placements over paid-ads.

Secondly, the copy used in your Title tag and site content has to be more compelling than that of your competitors. Search users are reading before clicking. If they have to make a choice between three sites that are all perceived to be equal (those in the 3 rd to 5 th positions), they will almost always choose the one with the most topically relevant descriptive text and link-copy.

Put together, the results of the three studies show that search engine users are able to tell the difference between paid and free listings and tend to trust the free organic listings more than they do the paid ones. The studies also show that search users, while still tending to put a higher bias on the Top5 results are becoming sophisticated enough to seriously consider descriptive copy before choosing to select a link. In other words, the search users are starting to make what appears to them to be the wisest choices when selecting search advertising. The advertisers are advised to do the same.

by Jim Hedger, News Editor

Important ©Copyright Note: readers are welcome to republish the content from StepForth Weekly newsletters
but we do require credit in the format that follows: "Article by <author>, StepForth Search Engine Placement Inc."
Resell SEO Services Give Your Clients The Search Engine Placements They Need.
Take the StepForth Review Find out how search engine friendly your website is today... (free!)

The Major Player Update

GoogleGoogle Takes Backhanded Bow Out of Size War with Yahoo

Earlier this week, the document-counters at Google did two silly things.

YahooFirst, they announced they were ending their participation in what has become known as the "size war". They removed the document-counter on their front page and acknowledged the size of a search engine's index does not necessarily reflect the most important measure of a good search tool, relevance. "At Google we believe the essential quality of an index isn't the total number of documents, but its comprehensiveness - which unique documents are in the index."

Minutes after declaring an end to the size war, they announced that they actually do have the largest index, claiming to now be three times larger than any other search engine.

That set a number of search engine observers to talking, a discussion that was summed up by Danny Sullivan yesterday in the Search Engine Watch blog .

In a telephone interview with the Reuters news agency, Marissa Mayer, Director of consumer web products said, " We believe that we have an index that is three times larger without counting duplicate pages."

Google recommends web users test obscure search terms producing less than 1000 results to evaluate the usefulness of Google's increased depth. As stated on their Sizing Up Search Engines page,

"To see for yourself, try searching for something very specific, or try a query that previously returned very few results. For example, you could enter your name or hometown, along with your favorite color or animal. Navigate to the last page to see how many results the search engine really delivered. (On the last page, you may have to click the "repeat the search with the omitted results included" link to see all the results.) Do this on different search engines for several queries and see what you come up with."

Yahoo has not responded to Google's not-so-subtle pokes at the time of this writing but if they do, the war of perceptions will be back.


Global Search Engine Popularity Stats

Dutch Internet-analytics firm OneStat released their autumn study of global usage share for the major search engines. Predictably, Google remains in first place with over half of all search engine references coming from Google.com or one of its regionally branded search tools such as Google.co.uk or Google.com.au . Yahoo placed second with MSN taking a distant third. Surprisingly, AOL (which still shows results generated by Google) beat Ask for the number four spot.

According to traffic generated by the search engines, the global usage rankings are:

1) Google 56.9%

2) Yahoo 21.2%

3) MSN 8.9%

4) AOL 3.2%

The methodology OneStat uses is mentioned in their press release:

"A global usage share of xx percent for search engine Y means that xx percent of the visitors of Internet users arrived at sites that are using one of OneStat.com's services by using search engine Y. All numbers mentioned in the research are averages and all measurements are normalised to the GMT timezone. Research is based on a sample of 2 million visitors divided into 20,000 visitors of 100 countries each day. "

by Jim Hedger, News Editor
The Net Reality

The Power of Blog

Despite the fact that only 1% of mainstream journalists rate information found on blogs as "credible", research into the habits of journalists conducted by Columbia University shows that just over half of them used blogs for source material.

The survey of 1,202 journalists around the world also showed that 51% of journalists consult blogs for story ideas while 28% of them relied on blogs to provide them with day-to-day information. A related study done by Pew Internet and the American Life Project shows that only 11% of US residents read blogs on a regular basis.

"As blogs continue to gain in popularity, quality and influence, it is becoming imperative that journalists and journalism students continue to integrate blogs, especially blogs that cover technology, into their reporting practices," said Steven S. Ross, associate professor at Columbia University and a partner in the study.

The study also shows that journalists are likely to put more weight on finding breaking news and following long-term stories by visiting and reading blogs. 68% of respondents agreed with the statement that "Blogs will become a more popular tool for corporations seeking to inform consumers." A further 58% agreed, "blogs will remain an independent and unorthodox means of disseminating information."

by Jim Hedger, News Editor
 
Visit the SEO BLOG Regularly for Daily SEO Tips & Updates

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

To unsubscribe from this weekly newsletter simply reply to news@stepforth.com
and include "unsubscribe" as the subject.

Important ©Copyright Note: readers are welcome to republish the content from StepForth Weekly newsletters
but we do require credit in the format that follows: "Article by <author>, StepForth Search Engine Placement Inc."