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Froogle

Googles Froogle Shopping search goes Beta

         

feeder

2:40 am on Dec 12, 2002 (gmt 0)

Marcia

7:07 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



My toolbar's been on and off all morning. It's grey right now.

Here's the Everflux [webmasterworld.com] information, with several links to other threads. More can be found using the site search at the top left of the page.

GoogleGuy

7:08 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Don't be so cynical, Lots0. That's our fresh crawl picking up new pages before the main crawl. You can tell because of all the dates beside the results. We introduced our fresh crawl specifically to handle breaking news like this. For example, if you search for Froogle on, say, AltaVista, you'll see several pages that say "Refreshed in the last 48 hours." That doesn't mean that AV hand-manipulated their results to benefit Google, right? :)

More on topic: quiet_man, that's a really important issue you raise. I absolutely agree that Google should work well everywhere, not just in the U.S. Over half our traffic comes from outside the U.S., and we're always looking to improve our international quality. I think that in this case, people want to make sure that everything works smoothly before explicitly trying to do other currencies and countries. Napoleon, I see over 60K sites from the UK in Froogle, so it's not an absolute requirement to be only US-based. It probably wouldn't hurt to try to do everything you mentioned though.

A couple points about languages/currencies/cultures. It is possible to search Google with over 86 interface languages, and our AdWords program is already more scalable than most advertising programs because you can choose several currencies and languages. One last interesting tidbit: from time to time, we do show holiday logos for just a country or two. For example, today is Santa Lucia day on our Swedish and Norwegian pages:
[google.com...]

This is a pretty good page about countries and languages:
[c.asselin.free.fr...]

Macguru

7:11 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>SERP’s ONE DAY after going live?

I am not really surprised with all those links pointing to it. This thread is 3 days old already. :)

Lots0

7:29 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)



Maybe you folks are correct - No hand manipulation here - But I don’t think so - I guess we will have to agree to disagree. I personally see this as just one more example of Google saying one thing and doing something else.

<added> never believe the person that tells you they never lie - never trust the person that tells you they are always honest</added>

[edited by: Lots0 at 7:36 pm (utc) on Dec. 14, 2002]

tommy

7:34 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Here's a suggestion - Another such search portal for porn. And you can call it just oogle (Get it? ogle..oogle)

GoogleGuy

7:36 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Lots0, I don't know how much more clear I could be: the search results for "froogle" are completely untouched by human hands--they really are that fresh. Several knowledgeable people on this forum have stated that the behavior on this search is completely consistent with their experience. I'm sorry if you don't believe that, but I respect your choice to disagree.

Macguru

8:02 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Please take the time to read all those everflux and fresh dates threads to find all the others. :)

EquityMind

8:08 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)



No Lots0 - Chiyo, pMac and MacGuru all indicated to that effect and I will also agree to that point that there is no hand manipulation here. When you have a site go live referencing an obscure term, with a fresh crawl (which you typically see for news sites) you can rank well. Also it did not just 'pop up' to number 1, it actually made its way up, I saw it go from nowhere to middle of the page to #2 to #1 where it currently stands, not so difficult considering all of the worldwide attention Froogle is getting especially from freshly crawled news sites as well.

I'd also like to point out that after having met several of the top executives of Google at the GoogleDance 2002 and working with several of their adWords folks and having listened to lectures by techs and engineers at SES conferences, that I have not witnessed a finer group of people all working towards the same goal with an incredible company culture.

Off topic and a new one for the glossary BT - if Yahoo ever picks up these ferps for Yahoo Shopping will we now have a Yafroogle?

Lots0

8:10 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)



Macguru said,
Please take the time to read all those everflux and fresh dates threads to find all the others.

I did, you were the only one that said that, the others were offering where to find information on everflux. ;)

przero2

9:12 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)



Lots0, I will have to agree with GG on this based on my experience with one of my sites. It went live and in a day or two I started getting traffic from Google SERPs per my access logs(the site's PR is still grey). Simple reason being that the everflux and the site being linked from another highly relevant/themed site caused it to be freshed and appear in SERPs almost instantaneously.

Froogle being such a major new entrant, I am not surprised that you saw the effect of everflux quickly!

Helpmebe1

9:28 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Fellas, Guys, Gents...

Ok.. I realize some of you are 20 year old guys and girls in here who have no knowledge of the "real" world and such.. as for the rest of you.. Well dont be fooled for one second. Froogle is certainly not our friend! Froogle will merge with Yahoo and they Y Stores for revenue shares. Thats number one of many ways they will be making alot of cash. Secondly, froogle allows people to sort by price or scan by price at the moment. THIS IS NOT GOOD! One can scan a hundred stores and buy from the pimple faced 17 year old boy who while he is in High School is selling his stuff online and making a dollar on each item when as of now people make a zillion times more. A true business needs profit to surivive. This does not allow that! FROOGLE does absolutely nothing but cause a big stir and sends every single merchant into a price war.. the effects.. many people go out of business and the pimple faced boy makes a couple of bucks with his pennies of margain, does he care? Nope.. afterall he only needs gas money while living in mom and dads house while going to high school. As for those of you that think yeah but now I can buy my stuff cheaper.. Well if you sell something. WELL HELLO with what money since you arent making any. As for google thinking no, we are friends with this froogle deal.. HA! They are laughing their asses off so hard when they say that. Cmon.. get business sense.. Froogle is in no way, shape or form our friend. The best thing to do would be supress froogle, hope noone ever uses it and hope AV or someone comes in and squishes google and turns their lights out! Sorry GG, but you know this is true. While I think your a good guy I see nothing but harm coming from froogle.

Chris

GilbertZ

9:50 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)



1. I think that there are so many links on the web to froogle, it made many major newspapers that it is more than reasonable for it to be #1 for natural reasons. But even if it was hand-manipulated, who cares? Google has a PR10. If AltaVista had PageRank they would call AV PR10 whether by hand or by automatic reasons, who cares?

2. Froogle will be important. It will have a market. Amazon is important, it will have a market. Microsoft wants to own the net. Yahoo wants to own the net. They will all get a share. But it won't and can't be all things to all people, even if they do a very very good job at it. And what will make it impossible is the pricing. Just wait till people try to manipulate pricing, with shipping costs, quality costs...It's one thing to write an algorithm to detect link farms but no computer will be able to compare 2 merchants offering the same product for 2 different prices with hidden fees. What SEOs can do with ecommerce is unique and cannot be replicated by a froogle style engine.

Those with the right attitude will use Froogle to their advantage...

Marcia

10:42 pm on Dec 14, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Lots0, scroll up a bit. There's a direct link pointing you right at it, including GoogleGuy's own explanation.

MikeKay

12:13 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



We spend allot on Adword advertising and have to build this in our online pricing. Now with Froogle, I'll have to compete with websites offering the same products for substantial discounts. These will be little shops who will cut their prices by not having to advertise and will attract customers by offering low pricing. I see a price war abuse where all these little websites now have a way to get in this internet game by offering products at very low pricing.

Hopefully, these will be the people that spam the results so bad that most people will shy away from using Froogle. Price is a powerful tool when you can get something for 20% less. These websites will now be found by using Froogle's "Narrow by Price" feature. These people can't be found in the regular SERP's and can't afford to advertise with Google's Adwords without raising their prices. Let them pay for it like the rest of us.

Froogle will screw us paying Adword advertisers. Our sales will go down along with the advertising budget. It's tough enough getting online sales through advertising and working hard to get top SERP results.... now we have to worry about competing with a large number of "fly by night" websites who can now be found because they offer the same product at a 20% discount! We know on this board how difficult it is to be found by the search engines. It takes allot of hard work and a understanding of what search engines look for. But with Froogle you can be easily found by just offering the lowest price, looks like a real easy way to spam the engine. Google, you're making it harder for your Adword advertisers to justify spending so much money with you. Once our online sales go down so will the amount that we spend on advertising. I hope you're going to make alot from Froogle because you will screw Adword advertisers. "Fly by night" websites will have a field day. Just offer the lowest price and now you can become a "player" and be found on Froogle. Who needs to advertise or offer good service - You'll be seen now because of the low price. Do you really think paying advertisers like the idea of competeting with websites who will cut prices just to be found on Froogle? Do you think this will make it easier to sell products for your advertisers?

Bobby_Davro

12:15 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



HelpMeBe1,
welcome to the free market economy ;)

If people want to buy the cheapest, so be it. However, many people can see beyond the pricetag. I won't buy from a site if I don't like the look of it, or it isn't clear what I am getting. A few quid saved is far less important than getting what I want when I want it, and in the condition it should be in.

Price comparison is not new by any means. I don't know what the US has, but the UK uses Kelkoo and sites like that for comparisons. There are lots of shops on there and the prices vary enormously, so obviously price isn't everything.

It won't be the end of every online shop by any means, although if it really takes off it may, as you say, cause more price wars. But then we already see this - Amazon discounts bestsellers to the extent that independent bookshops cannot compete; so they don't. Instead, they concentrate on other areas of their business such as customer service, specialised lines etc.

mattlamb

12:41 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Ok if its powerd by google why does my single word keyword return a #2 position in google and in Froogle its way down the listings ( I gave up looking after 24pages) , it is listed if I search for my domain name I can find all my products, dont talk prices we are the cheapest in our product! (I scan the web to make sure ...).

Matt

lgn

12:46 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)



Secondly, froogle allows people to sort by price or scan by price at the moment. THIS IS NOT GOOD! One can scan a hundred stores and buy from the pimple faced 17 year old boy who while he is in High School is selling his stuff online and making a dollar on each item when as of now people make a zillion times more

Im afraid its not that simple. We have the buying power to buy the product from the manufactuer,the 17 year old does not. We could probably sell the item for less than the 17 year pays for it and make a profit.

And this is just one of the factors. Business is complicated. How do high price boutiques stay in business. There are several ways to make a business model work. Consumers buy for a lot of reasons, and lowest price is not always one of them.

Mattias

2:10 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I've been shopping alot on the net and the worst thing I know is BAD COSTUMER SUPPORT. As long as you have a good and friendly costumer support people will pay a few extra bucks. Would you buy from a company who treats you like crap? Would you buy from a company which delivers your order several weeks after you placed the order?
Maybe one time - and two or three times if you are imbecile. Companies who does treat their costumers well will get return costumers. Let's say a company sells exactly the same products as another company both listed on Froogle.

The first company is a bad company with bad costumer support etc but has a great listing on Froogle with low prices.
The second company is a good company with excellent costumer support but has a worse listing on Froogle and slightly higher prices.

The first company get 15 new costumers everyday, and only 1 is an imbecile return costumers. That's 31 return costumers per month.

The second company get 5 new costumers everyday, and 4 of the are return costumers. That's 124 return costumers per month.

Let's say those return costumers come back every third month to purchase something for $50.

The good company would get $6200 every third month from those 124 return costumers. That's $24800 per year spent by those 124 return costumers.

The bad company would get $1150 from their return costumers. That's $4600 per year from the 31 return costumers.

I don't think anyones business will be hurt by Froogle.

Helpmebe1

2:26 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



yeah but who says people return that much, if you sell "widgets" for say I am just going to say for your computer, so you buy a keyboard, now do you need a new keyboard next month? Nope. You see what I am saying. Jeans, sneakers, etc etc.. everything is easily found with a part number or what have you.

How can you show your service on the web? YOU CANT! SURE YOU can have a squeeky clean site, look professional but price is a big factor my friend.

Chris

Mattias

3:40 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It doesn't matter. Let'say they buy a new widget for your computer every eight month.

The bad company will have almost no return costumers.
The good company will have plenty.

The good company has many return costumers and make more than the bad company, therefore the good company can lower their prices if they wish to compete. Now the good company gets even more costumers and return costumers!

The bad company has almost no return costumers.
The bad company can not lower their prices more - they will not be able to make things go round.

Add the fact that the good company will have many satisified costumers who will tell their friends and family what a great company the good company is, and that everybody should shop for it because they offer such an excellent service.

Everyone will say that the bad company has usless costumer support and that they frankly don't give a damn about their costumers. They will get a bad rumour.

By the way, I make all my money on return costumers and I know people who tried to go the fast way and make some quick cash - all I can say is that they made $20 000 in a year (before all bills) the first three months. Later sales dropped heavily.

I make much, much, much more per year before all bills. Most of the money comes from return costumers PLUS I have MUCH higher prices than the other guy had. How can I have higher prices? I have satisfied return costumers who comes back.

I think that good costumer service is one way to give your company a face on the internet and show your service on the web.

Word of mouth is the most important marketing tool for your business. You can not rank what people say about your company with some Google Toolbar and tweak what your costumers is saying about your company by changing some meta tags.

I still beleive Froogle will not harm any business.

It's 4.36 in the morning over here and I'm very tierd. Sorry if the post is messy and hard to understand. Please bare with me.

europeforvisitors

4:08 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)



Return customers are certainly a valuable asset, but you've got to get those customers in the first place. If Bud's Widgets shows up higher in Froogle than you do, Bud is likely to get those customers--and he'll be #1 in line to get their next orders, too, if he provides satisfactory service at a good price.

dauction

4:52 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



GogleGuy , I have been replacing affiliate products with my own products..

I have a "mix" of affiliate and own products on all pages..

Will froogle pick up the "none" affiliate products?

or

If it see's any affiliate products it slams the entire site?

Enigma

4:55 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

Mattias

5:08 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I just think that maybe helpmebe1 are focusing a little too much on prices.

If this store with great service and low prices are ranked #1. Do they not deserve to be there no matter if they are competitors or not?

There are no easy road to having a sucessfull business online or "offline". I think Froogle can help businesses but I certainly don't think it can break a business with a strong business model, no matter what the rank says.

Businesses with weak business models would have and will get thrown out of the game sooner or later anyway.

If people say that Froogle will break their business maybe they'll have to rethink their business model and try something new.

Froogle rocks.

cline

5:19 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Has anybody figured out how product webpages should be structured so that they appear properly in Froogle?

lgn

5:23 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)



Companies may start using loss-leaders, to get traffic to there website from froogle.

Instead of bidding on keywords, you may be offering say blue widgets at cost, so that you will show up first in froggle. Once the customer shows up at your site, they will buy yellow and red widgets, at a higher price.

Or get blue widgets at such and such price if you promise to buy a life time supply of purple-widgets, in the conditions apply offer.

Or maybe the blue-widgets are out of stock, but we have a good deal on orange widgets at only twice the price in the old bait and switch gambit.

Is this beginning to sound like those Walmart door crasher specials, where they only stock 2 items for the special, and sorry no rain checks :)

The line between online and brick and mortar is beginning to get a little fuzzy.

Dante_Maure

5:26 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



How can you show your service on the web? YOU CANT!

Nonsense, and if you don't know how to show your service on the web, then you shouldn't even consider trying to make it in eCommerce.

SURE YOU can have a squeeky clean site, look professional but price is a big factor my friend.

Sure, price is a factor, but in the vast majority of cases it is far from the dominant one.

Who's moving the most volume of book sales?

Amazon. (who never has the lowest price)

Who's the largest domain registrar in the world?

VeriSign (Network Solutions) Best Price? Suuuure, and I've got some beach front property in Arizona to sell ya too. ;)

Even GoDaddy doesn't have the lowest prices available, though price PLUS positive word of mouth has contributed to their rise through the ranks.

Largest Web Hosting company... Verio.

Best price? C'mon.

In most niches you will rarely find the top players offering the lowest prices in their industry.

Trying to compete on price is perhaps one of the worst ways to make a dent in any given niche. There will always be someone waiting in the wings that will undercut you and your profits.

Having a Unique Selling Proposition is far more important, and price is only one of many possible USPs. Differentiating yourself from the competition is the only way to insure long term gains that are not built on a house of cards.

In fact, offering the absolute lowest price can actually be detrimental to sales. When people see a price that seems to good to be true their skepticism goes through the roof and they are likely to spend an inordinate amount of time trying to find the catch.

On the other hand, a site that offers a reasonable price and takes the time to educate the consumer as to why they are worth every penny is going to come out on top almost every time.

Froogle isn't going to mean the death of good businesses because people can find better prices. People already do exactly that every day with the search engines and countless high profile comparison shopping sites.

What Froogle will hurt by offering price points is the business that doesn't have a clue about how to differentiate themself from their competition in the minds of their prospects.

patriciak

6:21 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Dante_Maure - excellent post. Thank you for making points that I wanted to have another run at making, well said.

Patriciak

EquityMind

7:15 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)



Dante_Maure I wholeheartedly concur. When I offer SEO services I am extremely expensive when I compare my service offerings to those I see quoted on the web, yet I offer a sophisticated clientele with excellent references, great rankings and a 10 year background in competative intelligence to offset my higher prices. I just won over a fortune 500 account over another SEO firm who offered to undercut my annual fee by HALF. The proof is always in the pudding. Its up to the website to offer a higher conversion ratio with compelling content and a strong customer service backbone to attract and retain customers.

As far as the Froogle algorithm, I'm finding that when my ecommerce sites offer products on the home page (featured items, etc.) for product names and model numbers (not general descriptive terms) I rank #1 on Froogle. For items offered on internal pages it's hit or miss so far.

EquityMind

7:20 am on Dec 15, 2002 (gmt 0)



Also had to mention - I just got back from a Christmas party and Froogle was a HIT, I had a bout 20 people waiting in line for the computer in the guestroom to check prices on items on Froogle after I had shown one other person the new site and left the room.
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