A New Era Of Search Is About The Answers, Not Just The Links

I lifted this article from TechCrunch where it was published on May 7th.  Forgive me, TechCrunch.  As a business Internet consultant, I try to explain the my clients that it is a full-time job to keep up with the moving target of Digital Marketing.  This article explains the coming rule changes in search.

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Editor’s note: The following guest post is written by Shashi Seth, the senior vice president of Search products at Yahoo! Previously, Shashi worked at Google where he developed the monetization strategy for YouTube and was also the product lead for search.

Search is about to change quite radically.  For more than a decade, search has been stagnant: the core product has not changed much.  Users have changed radically in that time frame.  Even though the kind of content users consume is different, search engines are still focused mostly on web pages.  Users have become less patient and have less time on hand, while search engines still require users to dig through and extract information from the web pages to find what they’re looking for.  In addition, users are spending more and more time on their mobile phones and other connected devices, which require a completely different kind of user experience for search.

When we talk about Search, keep in mind that Search, Discovery, Recommendations, and Serendipity are all essentially the same thing.  Why?  Well, to start with, one would need a comprehensive index of content for each of these things to work.  This gives you a world view, so to speak.  How that index is created has changed over time, and what goes into that index has changed.  About ten years ago, the index only consisted of HTML pages, but that information has been changing.  How the index was created was heavily focused on signals provided by HTML pages, links, consumption, etc.

Today, many social signals are consumed, including how often and how quickly an entity or URL is being embedded elsewhere, whether it is with positive or negative intent and sentiment, and is it trending up or down since last week/month.  Search engines have mostly focused on the backend and infrastructure, and rightly so, because search requires a delicate balance between some of the most complex technologies, and a vast amount of infrastructure.  Solving today’s user needs requires a different focus: a special blend of science, a finely tuned user experience, cutting-edge design skills, and a slightly different mix of engineering and infrastructure.

The question now is—how do search engines respond to this new world?

The answer, to put it simply, is to re-imagine search.  The new landscape for search will likely focus on getting the answers the user needs without requiring the user to interact with a page of traditional blue links.  In fact, there may be cases where there are no blue links on a search results page at all.

Search engines will keep assimilating content from many different sources and aim to provide immediate and rich answers.  You ask a question and you get answers, nothing else.  The user may not even type the full question.  Search engines will have to become more and more personal, understand the individual user’s preferences, location, type of content preferred, context from previous search and browse behavior, signals from social graphs, and much more.

Search has been a pull mechanism for information and content, while social sites such as Facebook and Twitter are push.  For search to succeed in today’s world, it has to become more push, which is why we at Yahoo! have been so focused on what we call contextual searches.  A contextual search is when a user happens to be away from a search box, maybe reading an article on Yahoo! News, and comes across a name, or place that he/she wants more information on, yet they don’t want to spoil the reading experience and leave the page, open a new tab, and do a search.

With Infinite Browse, Yahoo! currently enables users to highlight the term and get a small pop-up search result out of that action, without leaving the page. Yahoo! also identifies and underlines interesting terms/entities on the page, so when the user hovers over the word or words, additional information is provided.

Imagine a future where this information is entirely pushed to you without prompting the search, so engagement with the content you want is immediately at your fingertips.  This will prompt more and more searches to happen away from traditional search results pages, and will happen more in context of wherever the user may be—reading a news article and wanting to know more about a topic or entity, accessing information on a commuter train, getting recommendations pushed while writing an email or social conversation on that topic, and much more.

In the near term, innovation in search will provide more in-depth answers.  For example, if someone types the name of a Major League Baseball team, they get a search results page with the team’s homepage and likely a couple pieces of recent news.  In the next phase of search, you will type the name of that baseball team and without hitting the search button or leaving the search box, you will be presented with an interactive display that includes a link to their homepage, recent news, the results and box score of their last game, their overall record and standing in their division, a schedule of upcoming games, photos, videos, and social media streams.

How about searching for a restaurant? In search today, you find links to the restaurant’s homepage, address, phone number, and rating.  In new iterations of search, you will type the name of that restaurant and be provided with its address and map, a view of its menu, the option to reserve then and there via OpenTable, see its ranking on Yelp, CitySearch, Zagat—along with photos, tweets, what your friends have said about it in your private social networks, and a quick and simple way to compare it with other similar restaurants.

The next chapter of search is going to be about providing answers and not just answers from Q&A sites (although Yahoo! Answers hit a billion Q&A last year).  We obviously believe in these types of “answers” and leverage it heavily, yet there are plenty of other types of real-time answers.

Most search indexes are in the 10s of billions of URLs, trending towards 100s of billions of URLs.  Information is dynamic and changes frequently.  For example, the movies running in a theater next to you are changing every week, and the timings may change even more frequently.  The San Francisco Giants score changes frequently too, as do the players stats.  So, while Q&A sites are really interesting in solving a certain set of needs for users, they are only a piece of the puzzle.

But the rise of Q&A sites across the Web speaks to the underlying need for better answers.  A new era in search is just around the corner that will make it easier to access the information, services and answers people are looking for.  A list of links just doesn’t cut it anymore.

 

 

 

Introduction to Email Marketing - 10 Steps of Effective Email Marketing Lead Generation Conversion

Your overall goal of any lead generation campaign is to connect with prospects in a meaningful way to nurture and convert them into customers. By using the below 10 process steps as a sales lead generation method, you will capture more sales-ready opportunities where email marketing is concerned.

Target_marketing
These are the ten steps; I will present details of each step at the rate of one per day.  These steps happen after you have sent your email(s) to your database.

1 • Monitor open rate

2 • Identify clickthrough rate

3 • Identify emails that were opened multiple times

4 • Identify target or familiar industries

5 • Research the target prospects

6 • Search in Google and Yahoo! for prospects keywords

7 • Call the prospect and use the script in this Kit

8 • Send confirmation email

9 • Track your activity

10 • Update system for converted clients and opt-outs

If you want to get started sonner, you can find more information on our website.

 

Identify The Major Players For SEO Fundaments

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If you want to build a profitable and recognized website, you will need to do more about how to build it rather than just making a beautiful website.  You will need to build search engine optimization (SEO) into your website as well.  Knowing what the major players are for search engines is an important start.

In years past there were actually more search engines gathering information concerning new websites and website content, but now a much smaller number are the work horses.  The smaller ones that are still left work off the results of the larger engines.  Here is the latest market split from May 30, 2010 by Hitwise:

Search_engine_share_hitwise

Major players for search engines:
•    Google
•    Yahoo
•    and the new-comer Bing, from Microsoft

Of course, Google is still the big name in search engines.  Google also has multiple other internet products including:
•    AdSense
•    Blogger
•    Gmail

Google sets the standard by which other search engines consider web pages.  Google has a ranking system developed for web pages and list them in relationship to other sites. 

The market share of search engine use for Google is approximately 72% and the closest engine to those numbers would be Yahoo with only about 15% of the market share.   Just a few years ago Google had about 50%.  So the others are being crowded out.

Yahoo also has various products beyond a search engine focus including Yahoo Mail, Yahoo stores, and others.   Not everyone has the same opinion about how to search the Internet, so 15% of internet users still continue to use Yahoo for their search engine needs.  

The software giant Microsoft places a distant third in the battle of search engines, but seems to be gaining some ground, and has been getting good reviews.  With Google unquestionably remaining the search engine leader even if you combine both Bing traffic and Yahoo traffic, it sends a loud message of who the major player for SEO is today.

Ask.com comes in fourth place with less than 3% of the market share although it does lead the multiple small search engines.  This engine was previously known as Ask Jeeves.  This engine presents search results and search request in a different way than the other engines do. 

Being empowered with knowing what the major players are for search engines in the Internet ocean, you will want to make your site search engine friendly or should we say Google friendly.

How to make these engines find your webstie is a whole other ball of wax.  As a starter, you should read and understand Google's Guidelines.

 

Get The Attention of Yahoo

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Getting a site indexed by Yahoo can be somewhat of a challenge.   There is a way to get the attention of the indexing robot for Yahoo and as a result your site can get some attention also.

You will need to do two things to provide constant updates to get indexed by Yahoo.  First you will need to provide updates directly to the web site.  Secondly you will need to use Real Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds.

The Blog.  If you do not already have a blog for your web site, you will need to start one.  The blog can be on your web site or you can use one of the free blogging services available.  It does not matter so much which service you use; just get a blog started.   You will need to make blog posts that relate to content on your website and place links to your website content on your blog.

I would highly suggest that, if you do not blog directly on your website, no matter what blog platform you use, make it part of your website by creating it as a subdomain of your website.  This is the most powerful connection you can create.

RSS Feed. Once the blog posts are in place, you will need to set up RSS feed.  There are free RSS feed services available, saving you considerable time rather than using a system of your own.  You will want to look around and get a system that seems easy to use.

Linking a HTML site map from your web site to your blog will get the attention of the robot for Yahoo and result in indexing your pages.  Even if you have an XML site map, you will need to set up and HTML site map for Yahoo purposes.

You will need a Yahoo email account to place an RSS feed to link provided by your blog provider.  Use the link, not the URL for your blog.  The feed will show at the end of the page.  Yahoo can take a few hours or even a day or so for new posts to be added.

Yahoo will index your website pages by following the blog links to your site pages.   The same can be done with Google.

Get the Yahoo robot working for you by adding each new page of content on your website as a link from your blog.   

Useful Information.  I have to say that you will not regret checking out our Wisdom Book.