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comScore Launches System Track Actual Consumer Search Queries

         

robertclough

9:52 pm on Apr 28, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Source: Market Wire Press Release

[marketwire.com...]

Snippet:
qSearch is the first information service to track and report consumers’ distinct search queries across 25 major search engines and portals, producing deeper, more complete insight than through previously available metrics.

darex

10:36 am on Apr 30, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



this tool looks as though it might have potential.

The undelying data may be better than any of the alternatives (overture, adwords, wordtracker).

The only problem with the data may be if the volume is not high enough especially for low frequency keywords.

Has anyone any idea as to cost or how good the interface is?

WebGuerrilla

5:21 pm on Apr 30, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member




What ComScore has going for it that other keyword services don't is the fact that they have demographic data on all their users. That has huge potential from a marketing point of view.

jeremy goodrich

5:30 pm on Apr 30, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It could be *very* good indeed:

qSearch is based on the comScore Global Network, which continuously and confidentially captures the complete Internet activity -- including search engine queries -- of a representative cross-section of more than 1.5 million global Internet users

I wonder if Alexa will make a 'counter move' to this product, as their reported download(s) of their toolbar are larger than 1.5 million...

However, call me a skeptic, but this doesn't make me believe their data will be that great, as they claim that AOL has 20% of the search market for the 4 weeks ending January?

And Google only has 23% versus microsoft's 17%...?

From my logs, I just can't get a grip on that data. Does the comScore stuff line up with anybody else's logfiles?

WebGuerrilla

6:12 pm on Apr 30, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member




If Google and Alexa really want to compete, then I think they will have to start asking for more information from those that download their toolbars. If all of Google's toolbar users had to give up their age, location, level of education and annual income in oreder to use the toolbar, the data collected would be worth alot more.

As a marketer, I want to know more than the number of searches and at what engines the searches took place. I want to know how females 18-24 residing in the midwest whose annual income is 35k-60k search.

From what I've heard about qSearch, you will be able to get that kind of info.

jeremy goodrich

1:52 am on May 1, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Good point about Google & Alexa needing to profile their visitors to get better data.

Still, one might argue - there is a new kind of data that they could extrapolate, which might or might not be as good as traditional marketing metrics...you never know :)

Besides, 'business' as usual is still evolving - wasn't the USA mostly agricultural a 100 years back?

For how long have we, as marketers, been looking at that data set income range, gender, education level, etc - to make decisions?

Surely not that long, in historical context.

Perhaps - if they have the kind of data that I think could be better, we'll be looking back at such tried & true metrics like 'traditional' offline profiling and think why were we ever doing such a thing?

skibum

5:41 am on May 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



If they Google or Alexa asked those kinds of questions for downloading the toolbar they'd get lots of interesting answers.

mil2k

12:44 pm on May 14, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



If they Google or Alexa asked those kinds of questions for downloading the toolbar they'd get lots of interesting answers.

ROFL