Site-Seeker’s 7 Year Anniversary – 2003 Internet Marketing Predictions and the 2010 Reality

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Last Friday marked Site-Seeker’s seven year anniversary. Over the past seven years we have worked with hundreds of Clients and I’m happy to say that with a client retention rate of 90%, we still work with many of the same companies. That’s a tribute to all of the hard working people that have been part of the Site-Seeker team over the years. As we enter our eighth year in business, a lot has changed and the skill sets of our employees have changed to keep pace.

I recall a conversation back in 2003 with my good friend Greg Karl (employee 001 as we jokingly called him). Greg and I sat around one night trying to predict what Internet marketing would look like in five years. Below you can see our thoughts and the reality of what happened. We were spot on in a few cases, but were blind sided in a few others.

Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

  • 2003: We thought SEO would wain in popularity as pay per click (PPC) and local search grew.
  • 2010: The definition of SEO has morphed to encompass the optimization of news, video, images, local search, updates (Twitter), blogs, books and all of the other media types that make up the universal (multiple content types) search results.  Yet traditional natural (or organic) textual SEO rankings are still the most coveted slots on a search engine results page.


  • The competitive nature of SEO and improved search engine ranking criteria has made SEO less forgiving with little room for error. It now requires that practitioners pay closer to a greater number of details. The one thing that has stayed constant is that content is king. Of all the Clients we have worked with, those that have allowed us to build better and more content (blog posts, video, images, social media content, local content, and detailed product or service descriptions) are receiving far better results.

Pay Per Click (PPC)

  • 2003: PPC went mainstream with Yahoo!’s purchase of PPC pioneer Overture (formally GoTo). Click fraud had become an issue and users were unsure whether they trusted the sponsored links. Boy traffic was cheap back then.
  • 2010: While click fraud is still an issue, advertisers have overwhelmingly voted with their pocketbooks that the risk is worth it. Google revenue has increased from  $1.44 billion (USD) in 2003 to $23.7 billion (USD) in 2009. That’s a 1545% increase over seven years and the vast majority of that came from PPC.


  • Today quality scores are everything. This makes PPC both more difficult to manage, but also provides the opportunity to generate a stronger ROI.

Web Analytics

  • 2003: We had recently emerged from the dark ages of website usage data. Server-side web analytic software ruled the web and client-side solutions like Hitbox, ClickTracks and others were making their mark with improved customization and reporting capabilities. Greg, a really smart statistician, knew that focusing on conversion rather than traffic was the ultimate solution.
  • 2010: Google has for years offered Google Analytics for free as a means to allow website owners the ability to demonstrate value from their PPC programs. Greg could not have been more correct, while content is king, conversion focused Internet marketing programs are the way to go and are still our focus today.

Social Media

  • 2003: MySpace was launched in August of 2003 and Facebook in 2004. While blogging was growing in popularity and already impacting US politics (ask Trent Lott – recall his much blogged about comments regarding Strom Thurmond in 2002), Greg and I did not predict that social media would grow so quickly.
  • 2010: Today social media is all the rage and is the fastest and cheapest way to communicate with past, current, and future clients. That said, not all aspects of social media are applicable to all every business.


  • In the end it’s simple, use the tools your customers use or that can otherwise positions you in the path of customers and prospects. B2B clients are best served with a program consisting of LinkedIn, blogging, YouTube, Twitter and of course reputation management. For B2C clients, swap out Facebook for LinkedIn.


    With this as a starting point, you need to focus on the specifics of your business and set priorities. For example, if you are a small town dentist, or large manufacturer selling into the B2B arena Twitter might be phase two (or possibly phase never) allowing you to apply more resource to Facebook or LinkedIn respectively. I realize this is blasphemy and that the social media gods and self-appointed experts will look upon on me with disappointment, but we need to keep it real.  Remember, focus on conversions. Twitter is a great tool and can be used to quickly distribute content created in other areas (in your blog for example). Toward that end Twitter has a ton of application.

So what’s next for Internet marketing?

While I don’t have the benefit of Greg’s opinion, I predict that search engine marketing (SEO and PPC) and social media will continue to converge. Google is leading this charge by integrating Twitter (Updates) on the SERPs and facilitating continuous data visibility between your website and Facebook page via the cross platform (and same code/account) Google Analytics capability. Finally, depending on your industry mobile search is either already here or just around the corner.

Thanks again to all of our Clients and employees that have made the past seven years so enjoyable! What are your Internet marketing predictions for 2015?

Yahoo!’s Multiple Personality Disorder – The Microsoft-Yahoo! Deal

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

Does Yahoo! have multiple personality disorder?

Since 2000, when I entered the search engine marketing business, Yahoo! has changed organic and paid search results providers more often than most people change their mind.

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Who is Yahoo! anyway? I guess that depends when you ask the question. Yahoo! has switched paid and non-paid search results provider/technology numerous times in the past decade.

Yahoo! started out as a human edited directory and added algorithmic search when it couldn’t keep up with the explosive expansion of Internet content. Over the years, Inktomi, Google, and its own search engine (based largely on Inktomi, which Yahoo! bought in 2002) have all provided organic search results to Yahoo!. Now with this latest deal, Yahoo! will receive its organic search results from bing.

On the pay per click front, Yahoo! first partnered with Overture (formally goto.com) and bought the service in 2003.  After a little tweaking and rebranding, Yahoo! Search Marketing was born. In 2007, Yahoo! introduced its Panama upgrade which added a quality scoring system to its pay per click ranking algorithm. This change mimicked Google’s approach and supported a better user experience. The Microsoft-Yahoo! deal requires that Yahoo! abandon all this work and serve up Microsoft’s adCenter ads.

The Microsoft-Yahoo! deal.

On Thursday, the Microsoft-Yahoo! deal was given the green light. See “US and European regulators have cleared the way for Microsoft and Yahoo! to blaze on with a planned tie-up aimed at taking on Internet search king Google.” Yahoo!’s switch to bing and adCenter will likely occur in late 2010 or early 2011, with care taken not to disrupt the lucrative holiday advertising season.

So what’s next?

All of this turmoil was caused by Yahoo!’s and Microsoft’s inability to compete effectively with Google. In fact, it is Yahoo!’s decade long hemorrhaging of search market share that has placed its head on the chopping block. As for me, while I’m a big Google fan, I can’t help but pull for the underdogs – Yahoo! and Microsoft. In any case, the face of search is changing and we at Site-Seeker will react accordingly.

5 Tips to increase Google traffic – eye tracking study.

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

5 Tips to increase Google traffic – eye tracking study .

I recently came a cross a post on Google’s Blog titled Eye-tracking studies: more than meets the eye. The post contains a great video on Google eye tracing and provides a few clues about increasing Google traffic. Watch the below video to see how users interact with a typical Google search results page.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w29DrEEsqT4[/youtube]

The post goes points out that users primarily focus on the top two search results. It also talks about how universal search impacts the use of Google by drawing attention to thumbnail images making it easier for users to select or bypass these images depending on their intent.

Based on this post, here are my 5 tips to increase Google traffic.

1) Target the first two positions on Google. Since users primarily look at the first two results, just being on the first page of Google is not good enough. If you are listed in position 3 through 10 (ten results per page). There is a good chance visitors won’t see or click on your listing.

2) Get listed in Google Maps. Google’s local business results are often listed at the top of a Google search results page. If you are listed there you’ll drive traffic to your site. The best part is that its free. Call me and I’ll give you some tips (Brian at 315.732.9281, x11).

3) Start an AdWords pay per click program today. Like local search, these listings are often shown at the top of a Google search results page. Too often people tell me that they don’t believe in pay per click. The reality is that every day people are searching for your keywords and clicking on pay per click ads. If your not there, you can’t get this traffic. It’s your call. Maybe your competitors would like a few more prospects.

4) Pay attention to your titles and description tags. Title tags are generally the blue underlined link that appears on a Google search results page.  This all important tag both helps your search engine optimization and, if it is compelling, can increase the likelihood that a user will click on your listing. The black text appearing in under the blue title in a Google search result is most often that page’s description tag. A well-written description tag can also increase the chances that a user will click on your listing.

5) Get your images listed in universal search and Google images. The best way to do this is to take great pictures and add descriptive Alt tags (describes the image) to these images. For more about Google image search see this video.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2Zaj0CAUoU[/youtube]

Penny for your thought.


Author

Brian Bluff
President and Co-founder of Site-Seeker Inc.