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Now it's conceivable that it's the same guy/company every time, or perhaps an optimiser, but 51 times the same terms? I am really, really puzzled. Anybody got any idea why this might happen?
One example is an industry of interest to me where the main product has two related names:- 1 = word1 word2 (with a space), and 2 = word1word2 (without a space). They used to be listed seperately, now they are combined.
It seems to me that whilst they are cleaning up their searches, they are also reducing the number of options available to bidders at a time when bidding is getting a little out of hand with the new alliances.
Interesting! I would actually be looking at providing more targeted variety in the searches.
Onya
Woz
Yes, NFFC, that would explain what I keep seeing down in the lower numbers. Maybe maintaining an exact database of every search adds too much overhead.
Makes me wonder about the numbers I get for kw searches when buying banner ads from Yahoo and so on. My guess would be that they are also estimates from samples.
>>Why do things appear blindingly obvious only after people explain them?<<
LOL, it's always been like that, all my life. It sometimes blows me away that all of this complexity is still a big pile of ones and zeros. That's pretty simple.
I think what you see some times in the weird results are machine generated queries. Some one will type into their se utility a string of keywords they are interested in, and then dig down through them. I see it all the time on jf [joefarmer.com]. There are so many people running automated se tools right now that corrupt results are bound to happen.
When I spoke about overhead, I wasn't thinking about disk space but response time under peak load conditions. However the point you make about corruption from automated queries is right on and would explain it all.