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Who is Espotting feeding

Lycos is lost!

         

Kevin

9:46 pm on Jul 8, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I see that Espotting has lost the feed to lycos.

Apart from Yahoo UK and ASK (Which is a pain) what other big names are they supplying?

(I'm getting more from yahoo.com - Overture UK than from yahoo.co.uk - espotting)

Fiver

4:14 pm on Jul 11, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>(Like drinking 1/2 the Pepsi or dropping off >when 1/2 the page is loaded.)

>View from the product side of the fence:
>On the other hand, when products reach a >different percentage of the people, the >percentages should add up to 100.

no they shouldn't. each product should have a portion of 100% of the market that they reach. If each person was only able to ever be exposed to one product then you're right, but since we are exposed to more than one... Each product could not have more than 100% market reach, that would be illogical, but they can all have 99.99% if they like.. if they're all really good at reaching us.

Market share is the metric that asks the question, which product do you prefer and use, and since we can only prefer 1 product over all of the others, the market becomes the 1 or whole, and each product can have a portion (or share) of that. All of *those* numbers must add up to 100%, or the whole market.

So I think what you're thinking is
when products *are preferred* by different percentages of the people, those percentages should add up to 100% - reach is a very different thing, and presents it's own value for consideration. Not to say market share wouldn't be a more valuable or immediately useful measure, but it's not as easy to come across or calculate.

yu zimmi?

OK the math is a little old school around here i see, like someone just posted that they get 300% more traffic from one source than another, but what they mean to say is they get 3 times as much. 300% doesn't exist, as 282% doesn't exist. of course thats a very old and not very search engine related argument.

and i thought math was supposed to clarify things.. ugg.

Abrexa_UK

5:19 pm on Jul 11, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It seems to me that saying "300% more" is fine. And to me that also means *four* times the traffic: 100% plus another 300% more.

Fiver

5:23 pm on Jul 11, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



well that's just it.. meanings have changed over the past couple of decades. it used to sound strange to us to phrase it 200% instead of twice as much.. the former though does manage to piss off all the mathheads i went to school with, it doesn't make any real sense, but it's taken on a meaning which does make sense to us, so it's functional, so I should drop it, and stop the run on sentence too. math gets abused all the time anyway. as does english...

Kevin

9:50 am on Jul 13, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Quick addition on which PPC engines are running on each of those lists.

Overture UK is being listd on Yahoo.com for UK browsers

ish

9:08 am on Jul 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



BobbyDavro

In answer to your question, that is Overture UK only.

The extra traffic is mainly AOL and MSN.

Bobby_Davro

11:58 am on Jul 24, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks Ish,
Do you think that the difference is due to a different kind of user at AOL and MSN (people who stick with their defaults) looking for your site, or do you think that Overture UK has 4 times the traffic of Espotting? Or a combination of the two?
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