Article Check
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > SEO > The Growing Pains of Search

Tags

  • professional
  • differentiation
  • smaller providers
  • dramatically alter
  • pages bidding

  • Links

  • Can Stress Play a Role In Hair Loss?
  • A Detoxing Cleansing System is the Key to Weight Loss
  • What is FeedBurner? Managing Feeds to Glamorize Your Content
  • Article Check - The Growing Pains of Search

    Blog Posts Linger On The Web Forever - What It Means To Your Profits
    PPC (Pay-per-click) ads are very effective. The only problem is that you have to pay to keep the ads running. The same is true with every form of promotion or advertising that you can think of. Even directories and websites that post other people’s articles periodically clean out older, less relevant content.That’s the big difference between blog posts and other content on the net. Blog posts linger on the World Wide Web forever. This can be a huge disadvantage in that any scandal or negative story about your business will always be out there lon
    e, I noticed a few search marketing companies starting to use a different vocabulary. Not new, different. It's terminology that comes from marketing and is strategy based. We're beginning to talk about customer profiling, identifying attitudes, the nature of the buying cycles and the role of brand awareness. It's a new way of speaking aimed at marketers, not webmasters.

    My Impression of San Jose

    I believe years from now that the 2004 San Jose show will be a milestone in the industry. I think it will mark the beginning of a year that will dramatically alter the nature of the search marketing industry. We will grow up, and that will mean significant pain for many. Search will become much more sophisticated, and the price of entry to play the game may prove to be too expensive for many smaller providers. Alliances wil

    How to Maximize the Benefits of a Networking Event?
    Everyone needs to network: entrepreneurs, small business owners, job seekers! But does everyone maximize the benefits of networking? The purpose of networking is to build relationships so you will get leads from someone you know, or from someone who knows someone you know. When you attend a networking event the purpose is to meet business people from various industries to get exposure.What networking is not?Networking is not a numbers game; you need to focus on quality and not on quantity. Some people think that they had a successful eve
    Ahh…our fledgling little industry is growing up.

    The little search marketing companies are unfurling their new wings and trying to peer over the edge of the nest. Suddenly, VC firms are looking at search marketing technology with stars in their eyes. It's beginning to seem that a few people are going to make a lot of money in this industry. And we've even got internal politics. All signs of an industry that’s finally ready for a run at the main stage.

    All of the signs became more apparent at the recent Search Engine Strategies conference in San Jose this month. This event, for right or wrong, has become the regular group therapy session of search. It doesn't seem to matter where it’s held, you'll see all the familiar faces at Search Engine Strategies. "If it's August, this must be San Jose!" We come, we bitch, we share…and then we go home, just to do it all again in a few months.

    With each new show, the latest hot topic spreads from table to table at the networking lunchs and cocktail parties. In Chicago (December) it was Google's Florida Update. In New York (March) it was Yahoo's unveiling of SiteMatch. And this time, for a change, it didn't have anything to do with one of the big engines. This time, it was our own little industry and it’s new professional organization (SEMPO) that stirred up conversation along the hallways of the San Jose Conference Center.

    Growing Up is Hard to Do

    It's not easy to gain maturity. Lord knows it’s still a struggle for me. As search tries to claw it's way onto Fortune 500 marketing budgets, the driving forces of the industry still have to figure out where it is they're driving too. Is search still a cottage industry, a loose amalgam of hundreds of small shops, or is it starting to become big business?

    Will search marketing be overseen by internal departments in the biggest companies and advertising agencies? Will the best of the little guys be gobbled up in the next few years, with the rest left to find a niche to survive in, or wither on the vine?

    To make prognosticating even more difficult, we still have to wait for the technology to mature before we can see where the industry could go. Something like providing results targeted to geographic locations can have huge implications for us all.

    The biggest thing I saw in San Jose was the beginning of a chasm developing in our industry. A handful of more sophisticated and forward thinking search marketers are beginning to really explore what can be done in search. They're beginning to think research and strategy, rather than linking tactics and meta tag optimization. They’ve refocused their vision to look at the large and emerging picture of search. In their wake, they’re leaving the more traditional firms, usually quite small, who are using tactics from 4 or 5 years ago.

    One of the things that has frustrated many about our industry was the lack of differentiation between search marketing firms. Despite the huge spread in prices, we all pretty much said we offered the same things. The minute we started talking to a potential client, we started spouting works like organic optimization, link building, landing pages, bidding strategies and ROI tracking. All of this is relatively unique to our industry and reflects an exclusively tactical approach.

    In San Jose, I noticed a few search marketing companies starting to use a different vocabulary. Not new, different. It's terminology that comes from marketing and is strategy based. We're beginning to talk about customer profiling, identifying attitudes, the nature of the buying cycles and the role of brand awareness. It's a new way of speaking aimed at marketers, not webmasters.

    My Impression of San Jose

    I believe years from now that the 2004 San Jose show will be a milestone in the industry. I think it will mark the beginning of a year that will dramatically alter the nature of the search marketing industry. We will grow up, and that will mean significant pain for many. Search will become much more sophisticated, and the price of entry to play the game may prove to be too expensive for many smaller providers. Alliances will

    Cash Flow Management Made Easy
    Small business owners soon learn that Cash Flow and Profit are not one and the same thing. The two may be related but are not always in concert. There can be high profits reported during a period of extremely tight cash flow and low profits reported during a cash rich period.Profitability is based on invoicing and the relationship of costs, either expended or accrued, to those sales. The actual payment of expenses or receipt of invoice payments can, and often do, occur in periods different that when the sales occurred, so that cash flow can be wi
    hare…and then we go home, just to do it all again in a few months.

    With each new show, the latest hot topic spreads from table to table at the networking lunchs and cocktail parties. In Chicago (December) it was Google's Florida Update. In New York (March) it was Yahoo's unveiling of SiteMatch. And this time, for a change, it didn't have anything to do with one of the big engines. This time, it was our own little industry and it’s new professional organization (SEMPO) that stirred up conversation along the hallways of the San Jose Conference Center.

    Growing Up is Hard to Do

    It's not easy to gain maturity. Lord knows it’s still a struggle for me. As search tries to claw it's way onto Fortune 500 marketing budgets, the driving forces of the industry still have to figure out where it is they're driving too. Is search still a cottage industry, a loose amalgam of hundreds of small shops, or is it starting to become big business?

    Will search marketing be overseen by internal departments in the biggest companies and advertising agencies? Will the best of the little guys be gobbled up in the next few years, with the rest left to find a niche to survive in, or wither on the vine?

    To make prognosticating even more difficult, we still have to wait for the technology to mature before we can see where the industry could go. Something like providing results targeted to geographic locations can have huge implications for us all.

    The biggest thing I saw in San Jose was the beginning of a chasm developing in our industry. A handful of more sophisticated and forward thinking search marketers are beginning to really explore what can be done in search. They're beginning to think research and strategy, rather than linking tactics and meta tag optimization. They’ve refocused their vision to look at the large and emerging picture of search. In their wake, they’re leaving the more traditional firms, usually quite small, who are using tactics from 4 or 5 years ago.

    One of the things that has frustrated many about our industry was the lack of differentiation between search marketing firms. Despite the huge spread in prices, we all pretty much said we offered the same things. The minute we started talking to a potential client, we started spouting works like organic optimization, link building, landing pages, bidding strategies and ROI tracking. All of this is relatively unique to our industry and reflects an exclusively tactical approach.

    In San Jose, I noticed a few search marketing companies starting to use a different vocabulary. Not new, different. It's terminology that comes from marketing and is strategy based. We're beginning to talk about customer profiling, identifying attitudes, the nature of the buying cycles and the role of brand awareness. It's a new way of speaking aimed at marketers, not webmasters.

    My Impression of San Jose

    I believe years from now that the 2004 San Jose show will be a milestone in the industry. I think it will mark the beginning of a year that will dramatically alter the nature of the search marketing industry. We will grow up, and that will mean significant pain for many. Search will become much more sophisticated, and the price of entry to play the game may prove to be too expensive for many smaller providers. Alliances wil

    Google-Yahoo-MSN (GYM) Cache Benefits
    One fine morning I thought of writing an article on Google's re-inclusion plan. I remembered some WebPages of a web forum where I had discussions regarding this. Least to say my C class IP was banned in the forum for almost no fault of mine. My urgency to access the forum page prompted me to use GYM cache. I typed: "cache:(Page URL)"in Google to get the forum page. This was one use of GYM cache but there are plenty more. Other uses of GYM cache: To check the outdated content of an updated page: Keeping track of pages
    earch still a cottage industry, a loose amalgam of hundreds of small shops, or is it starting to become big business?

    Will search marketing be overseen by internal departments in the biggest companies and advertising agencies? Will the best of the little guys be gobbled up in the next few years, with the rest left to find a niche to survive in, or wither on the vine?

    To make prognosticating even more difficult, we still have to wait for the technology to mature before we can see where the industry could go. Something like providing results targeted to geographic locations can have huge implications for us all.

    The biggest thing I saw in San Jose was the beginning of a chasm developing in our industry. A handful of more sophisticated and forward thinking search marketers are beginning to really explore what can be done in search. They're beginning to think research and strategy, rather than linking tactics and meta tag optimization. They’ve refocused their vision to look at the large and emerging picture of search. In their wake, they’re leaving the more traditional firms, usually quite small, who are using tactics from 4 or 5 years ago.

    One of the things that has frustrated many about our industry was the lack of differentiation between search marketing firms. Despite the huge spread in prices, we all pretty much said we offered the same things. The minute we started talking to a potential client, we started spouting works like organic optimization, link building, landing pages, bidding strategies and ROI tracking. All of this is relatively unique to our industry and reflects an exclusively tactical approach.

    In San Jose, I noticed a few search marketing companies starting to use a different vocabulary. Not new, different. It's terminology that comes from marketing and is strategy based. We're beginning to talk about customer profiling, identifying attitudes, the nature of the buying cycles and the role of brand awareness. It's a new way of speaking aimed at marketers, not webmasters.

    My Impression of San Jose

    I believe years from now that the 2004 San Jose show will be a milestone in the industry. I think it will mark the beginning of a year that will dramatically alter the nature of the search marketing industry. We will grow up, and that will mean significant pain for many. Search will become much more sophisticated, and the price of entry to play the game may prove to be too expensive for many smaller providers. Alliances wil

    Shock in the Workplace
    A shocking 80% of Americans all have something in common. Can you guess what that is? They hate their jobs! Imagine this scenario. It’s 6:00 A.M. The alarm clock starts its Incessant buzzing. How many people do you know jump out of bed excited that they are going to work that day? Why should they be happy? Here’s what they face. Their job actually starts with the process of getting ready for work. No pay of course. Personal grooming, eating that important first meal. Locking up and making sure the home fro
    be done in search. They're beginning to think research and strategy, rather than linking tactics and meta tag optimization. They’ve refocused their vision to look at the large and emerging picture of search. In their wake, they’re leaving the more traditional firms, usually quite small, who are using tactics from 4 or 5 years ago.

    One of the things that has frustrated many about our industry was the lack of differentiation between search marketing firms. Despite the huge spread in prices, we all pretty much said we offered the same things. The minute we started talking to a potential client, we started spouting works like organic optimization, link building, landing pages, bidding strategies and ROI tracking. All of this is relatively unique to our industry and reflects an exclusively tactical approach.

    In San Jose, I noticed a few search marketing companies starting to use a different vocabulary. Not new, different. It's terminology that comes from marketing and is strategy based. We're beginning to talk about customer profiling, identifying attitudes, the nature of the buying cycles and the role of brand awareness. It's a new way of speaking aimed at marketers, not webmasters.

    My Impression of San Jose

    I believe years from now that the 2004 San Jose show will be a milestone in the industry. I think it will mark the beginning of a year that will dramatically alter the nature of the search marketing industry. We will grow up, and that will mean significant pain for many. Search will become much more sophisticated, and the price of entry to play the game may prove to be too expensive for many smaller providers. Alliances wil

    Best Passive Income-Best Passive Income Opportuntiy
    When pursuing the great dream of home based business entrepreneurship, one needs to consider the ultimate objective in producing a reliable source of passive income.A passive income needs to be thought of as a developing entity. Initially, the passive income opportunity requires diligence and persistence. There is no substitute for good hard work and effort in launching a successful home based business opportunity on the internet.Once that business has gone through the testing phase, one may very well come to the point where the opportunit
    e, I noticed a few search marketing companies starting to use a different vocabulary. Not new, different. It's terminology that comes from marketing and is strategy based. We're beginning to talk about customer profiling, identifying attitudes, the nature of the buying cycles and the role of brand awareness. It's a new way of speaking aimed at marketers, not webmasters.

    My Impression of San Jose

    I believe years from now that the 2004 San Jose show will be a milestone in the industry. I think it will mark the beginning of a year that will dramatically alter the nature of the search marketing industry. We will grow up, and that will mean significant pain for many. Search will become much more sophisticated, and the price of entry to play the game may prove to be too expensive for many smaller providers. Alliances will form and total solutions will begin to emerge. Google and Yahoo will have to address the huge amount of time and effort required to manage a large sponsored search campaign. Real money will start to be invested, and made.

    And to think, one day I'll be able to say I was there.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.caseupon.com/article/78360/caseupon-The-Growing-Pains-of-Search.html">The Growing Pains of Search</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.caseupon.com/article/78360/caseupon-The-Growing-Pains-of-Search.html]The Growing Pains of Search[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Resume Writing Guide

    How To Plan For A Great Career

    Marketing Niches, Is It for You?

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com