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Inktomi Vs. Overture (aka GOTO)

         

stcrim

3:20 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



True Story:

Got a client in a competitive line. We started right in building and paying for INK pages and in short order had them well ranked #1 to top 5.

The results - very little!!! Sitting on top of those INK results in the only two portals that count (MSN - AOL) were the GOTO and directory results.

So we purchased the same targeted terms in GOTO and WOW, step back - the day they went up, our clients business exploded. They are hiring a new employee just to handle the web inquiries.

The verdict - they will spend a whole lot more money with GOTO this year and next - when the INK pages expire they will simply expire.

-s-

tigger

3:30 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Sign of the times Steve, SEO out! Account managers in! what a great way to start the New Year :(

Lee_bot

3:56 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)



One of my clients discovered the same fact this month after Google suffered their largest brain F**t of the year and all of her listings were dropped just in time for the heavy Christmas shopping season.
She then said to me that this was probably the end of the “free” Internet as we knew it. Like any other advertising medium the Internet would and is becoming a commercial venture for the users and the advertisers ( web site owners ).
If you want your ad ( listing ) to be at the top of the Sunday paper, or to run during prime time or during the Super Bowl on television you had better be ready to pay some big bucks. The Internet is quickly changing into another venue for large commercial companies to crush the little guys.
You can have #1 listings on most of the search engines through aggressive SEO and then Big Company #1will come along and pay $1.00+ a click followed by Big Company #2 and #3 and all of your hard work will only get you a #4 spot.
It may be time to start looking for another job.

nicebloke

4:38 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I disagree Lee_bot. I've actually seen a hell of a lot of smaller companies benfitting greatly from SEO of one kind or another.

I'd be happy to give you some examples. That's from a UK perspective.

Lee_bot

4:51 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)



nicebloke,
I have many examples of my own, but I can see the tide changing as time goes on.
We all would have to be a little naive to believe that in a year or maybe 2 if we are lucky the SEO ride will be over.
It wasn't that long ago that I used Infoseek to test pages with a 2 or 3 hour turn around time and Google was the sound that the PHD's behind it made when their moms changed thier diapers.
The times they are a changen...

nicebloke

4:56 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Times certainly are changing.

Just glad I don't rely on Google. :)

dwedeking

5:10 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)



Times are always changing. That is SEO. You see many posts on this board and boards like it saying SEO is over. They've been saying that for 3 years now. It's not over just morphing. This is normal for any industry that is new and hasn't settled into a routine / set standard of operating. One of my points that I make in a sales meeting is that the client gets a firm looking out for their best interest online when we are hired. We keep up to date on the best ways of promoting a site and recommend them. You're correct if changing keywords and typing are your only services then you'll probably get left behind (as in any business). Just my $.02.

Mike_Mackin

6:26 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>hasn't settled into a routine / set standard of operating.

Internet Marketing is all about NO set standard which changes overnight and you adapt overnight - over & over

When I first became involved in marketing STUFF via the WWW, I was very happy with InfoSeek.

nell

9:54 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Don't be fooled. This does not happen all year long.

During the Holiday times of the year a lot of new people get on the internet. A lot of people who don't use the internet much during the year to purchase things. A lot of busy people. These people tend to click on to the top ranked sites for given searches. (Those GoTo and Directory results that Steve described.)

I am one of a number of SEO's working for several large competitive e-commerce sites and I will tell you this. We use Overture (GoTo) during those "sucker seasons" for our full retail price sites. The rest of the year when we're dealing with the "regular buyers" we focus on usual SEO tactics with our cheaper, competitive price sites. During that time we stay away from paying per click. We focus on building strong customer relations with those "newbies" so they become our regular customers for next year.

The only way to pay the high click bid costs is to charge the customer full retail prices. You can only get away with that at certain times of the year. Those are the only times we ppc. To make some money but, more importantly, expand our regular customer base.

skibum

11:33 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It may be that we have only begun to see the downward pressure on the little guys on the net. Just a hunch, but PPC prices will continue to rise as more and more large companies develop quality sites and start spending the big bucks to promote them.

If Google vanished tomorrow, and all the traffic went to MSN, YAHOO!, AOL, etc, would there be any market for traditional SEO?

We've had similar experiences to those mentioned by stcrim in the first post- very little from Ink and enormous waves of traffic from GoTo.

nicebloke

11:54 pm on Dec 15, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Isn't choosing a good domain for Yahoo and writing a good description traditional SEO?

Isn't getting #1 Ink listings on keyword combos that don't have Looksmart listings traditional SEO?

Isn't writing a good L$ description traditional SEO?

bigjohnt

12:14 am on Dec 16, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Mike, you nailed it again. SEO and web marketing are about staying on top of the changes and adapting. Like flying a plane. You've got to keep shifting with the winds. If SEO does become obsolete, or ineffective, smart SEO pros will learn to adapt.

Even PPC can be "optimized".

Terrier

9:20 am on Dec 16, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Totally agree it is about adapting and being up to date with what is going on.

Ink does not produce the clicks in quantity, but it is a just about affordable price for what it is, and helps with getting the board covered with the pawns. ( I see it as a chess board with Google as the Queen) with the pawns as important pieces in the overall strategy. Overture is a pawn that if you pay can be turned into a maybe a queen for a few moves, does this make sense?

I think in my case I will have to be very careful if I use overture, top bids on my main keyword are $1.50 in .com to rich for me, uk index 22p at the present moment. Question do the surfers know the difference between the index’s I don’t think so.

At this time of year the main traffic for my keywords are made by competitors, students, and casual browsers no serious buyers. time to wait and watch for the moment that the serious buyers start to show then maybe just maybe I will give overture a whirl.

Their seemed to be a time when siteowners thought that clicks were bankable and = money. They are not, Buyers = money. I would rather have less clicks and more serious enquires so I believe an engine like overture needs very very careful management and an understanding of the individual market and as such requires a knowledgeable approach by seo experts such as yourselves.

It is so easy to get carried away with the search for traffic obsessively watching the logs "gota keep the curve going up" I know, I am guilty I hate to see a down day.

tigger

10:05 am on Dec 16, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



True times are changing but I can see the small business / site being out priced by the cost of SEO & paying for clicks / directories

tedster

6:20 pm on Dec 16, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Going back to the original post, there is definitely another side to the Ink vs. Overture comparison.

$25 can be evaporated in a heartbeat on Overture. On Inktomi, it feeds traffic for a year. That's a fee that a small business can afford. Furthermore, Ink-optimizing one page often has a small price tag, especially if the keywords aren't overly competitive.

I've taken on several small clients in niche markets where we Ink-optimize one page at a time. As their business grows, they come back for more and more, building their business in gradient steps. And they tell others (I love that part).

For the small business who has chosen to play in the big, competitive keyword pool -- well, they'd better have a very sharp business plan.