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Trends in Search Engine & Index Submission
(C) Robert Woodhead
Webslave, http://selfpromotion.com/
In the olds days (1999!), submission was a
numbers game. The more sites you could properly submit to, the
more traffic you'd get. But as the internet matures, this is rapidly changing.
The big difference is that these days, it costs to
get a listing in the major indexes (Yahoo & Open Directory), and the search
engines are also getting into the act -- Inktomi, Altavista and Mamma now have a
paid-submission option, and the other major search engines are all considering
following along.
There has been a lot of blathering on various discussion forums lately about the
"death of free submission," but quite frankly I think that it's a good
thing. I know that sounds weird, but bear with me for a minute.
From the standpoint of a commercial website, the problem with the net is that it
is drowning in other websites. The number of webpages is growing rapidly, which
makes it harder for people to find your website in the sea of other, similar
websites.
When people want to find a website, they typically go to one of the major
indexes or search engines. From your standpoint as a commercial website
operator, would you like their search to list 10,000 websites (submitted for
free), or 100 websites (each of which has paid $199 to get listed)? Obviously,
the latter!
At the same time, as long as free submissions are available for non-commercial
sites (and all the majors still permit this), non-commercial sites are not
penalized, because they are not competing with commercial sites. So if you are
not trying to make money on the web, fear not -- nothing has changed for you.
But if you are serious about doing business on the web, then
paid submissions are a good thing. They cut out all the chaff. Or to put it more
bluntly, "Money talks, B*llsh*t walks!"
The Economics of Paid Submission
If you make a profit of $10 when someone buys something on your site, and 1% of
your visitors buy something, then each new visitor is worth 10 cents to you. If
you can get visitors for 9 cents each, you make money; if they cost you 11
cents, you lose money. It's that simple.
There are three main sources for paid clicks that you should consider; paid submission
to indexes (like Yahoo), paid inclusion in a search engine
(currently only Inktomi, Altavista and Mamma provide this), and sponsored
listings in a pay-per-click search engine (the biggest being
Overture.com). All can be excellent sources of cost-effective traffic.
Paid Submission to Indexes
Three major indexes are now offering paid submission, and some of them require
it in their business and shopping categories. It is important to understand that
paid submission does not guarantee a listing -- if your site isn't good enough,
they'll reject it and you're out the money (though you can appeal). I have an
extensive tutorial on how
to submit to Yahoo and the major indexes that should minimize your chances
of a rejection and maximize your chances of a great listing that generates real
traffic. I consider it the most important page on this site.
I paid $199 for my Yahoo listing (note: now they are charging $299!), and last
year Yahoo sent me over 25,000 visitors. $199 / 30,000 = .8 cents a visitor.
That's dirt cheap, and this year I get them for nothing, since a Yahoo
registration is a 1-time thing. If you're selling on the web, that $299 is the
best investment you'll ever make (other than the money you send to me, of
course!). However, as of Dec 28, 2001, the Yahoo fee is now a yearly
affair, so you need to carefully consider whether or not it will be
cost effective.
Yahoo has just started offering Sponsored
Listings for between $25 to $300 a month, depending on category. 5
sponsored listings are displayed at the top of category pages (if more than 5
people buy sponsored listings, they rotate randomly). In order to get a
sponsored listing, you must first get a normal listing in Yahoo, then you can
apply for a sponsored listing in the category your listing is in. You can't use
this to change your listing title or description, by the way; it just gets you
"up top."
Is it worth it? My experience is that Yahoo Sponsored Listings totally
suck! Not only are the clickthroughs dismal, but when I applied for a
sponsored listing, Yahoo edited my current Yahoo listing and totally trashed it.
Talk about adding insult to injury! Yahoo was totally unresponsive to my
inquiries regarding this action.
Note: Please don't confuse Yahoo's Sponsored Listings
that appear in the directory listings with the Overture Sponsored Links
that can appear in Yahoo search results. The latter can work just fine, and I
have written a tutorial
on how to use them properly.
Yahoo has also introduced "Most Popular" listings underneath the
sponsored listings; so far it is unclear how a site becomes a Most Popular site.
Looksmart has (spring 2002)
treacherously "upgraded" all their paid listings to a pay-per-click
model. Don't give them a dime if you can avoid it. I no longer consider them to
be a major index.
There are other, 2nd-tier indexes that offer paid submissions. None of them are
worth it.
Paid Inclusion on Search Engines
There are now three Paid Inclusion services to consider, Inktomi, Altavista and
Mamma.
Inktomi offers a paid
inclusion service through several resellers. For $39 a year, this service
will guarantee your URL stays in the Inktomi database, and check it every couple
of days for changes. The advantages of coughing up the cash are:
- Your listing is always fresh, containing
your latest content. If you play with your keywords, you get to see how your
changes affect your ranking in a couple of days instead of a couple of
months.
- Inktomi provides search engine results for
many other search engines (such as HotBot and AOL), so you get broad
placement.
- Inktomi currently penalizes pages that are
submitted through their free Add URL service; pages submitted through the
paid inclusion service or stumbled upon by the Inktomi
spider (which independently wanders around the web) do not suffer this
penalty. Note however, that if you've submitted a URL through the free
service and Inktomi later finds it on its own, the penalty is removed. This
ranking penalty is Inktomi's way of dealing with "gateway" pages
and spam pages; they claim that the vast majority of page submitted via the
free Add URL service are spam.
- In addition, according to Inktomi, paid
inclusion is the only way to get "dynamic urls" (ie: ones with ?
in them) into Inktomi, as the regular spider will not spider them.
I have tested the Inktomi paid inclusion service
and it works as advertised. I recommend that commercial sites pay to list their
homepage using the service. While you can spend extra and list other URLs on
your site (at a discount) via paid inclusion, in most cases this isn't
necessary. It appears to be the case that paid inclusion URLs are often
used as starting points by the Inktomi spider, and so your other URLs tend to be
quickly found and indexed with no penalty. Also, once your page
has been found by the spider, resubmitting it via the free Add URL does not
cause it to be penalized! So my advice is pay for your homepage, submit all your
other pages via the free Add URL, and in a few weeks the spider will have found
most of your pages and removed the penalty. I should note that Inktomi says that
their paid inclusion service won't cause other URLs to be spidered, but my
experience is otherwise. It may be that it doesn't cause your related URLs to be
preferentially spidered. The jury is still out on this one.
As with every rule, there are exceptions, and if there are important pages on
your site that are constantly changing, paying a little extra to have Inktomi
refresh its listing more often may be a good investment.
Note: I get a referral payment if you sign up for Inktomi Paid
Inclusion. As always, these payments are donated to the Salvation Army.
Altavista offers a similar
service through a company called InfoSpider. Altavista also offers
"listing enhancements" such as icons in the search results for an
additional fee.
The big problem with Altavista is that their indexing in recent years has gotten
slower and slower, and their relevance, to be kind, sucks. This means that their
search results have been getting less and less useful. As a result, not
surprisingly, they've been losing traffic to more useful sites like Google.
Because it is so hard to get a top listing in Altavista other than by blind
chance, my advice is that if you don't already have a good listing there -- and
are generating significant traffic -- then stick with the regular free submit.
If you do have a good listing, then paid inclusion will be a good way of keeping
the listing fresh, and if you're on page 1 for a good keyword, then the listing
enhancements like an icon may get you more attention.
I am investigating obtaining group rates for SelfPromotion.com users for these
services.
Mamma, a meta-search engine, now offers
paid inclusion into their Mamma's
Collection database. Mamma's Collection is one of the sources Mamma uses
when generating Mamma's search results (in other words, they combine it with
results from Altavista, Yahoo, etc). The price is $60 (for 2 day turnaround on
your request) or $30 (for 8 week turnaround), with a $20 annual subscription
after the first year. You get to select your keywords, title, and description,
subject to the editing of the Mamma staff.
My very preliminary results are encouraging; being in Mamma's Collection has
raised my traffic from Mamma from a click every day or two to about 15 clicks a
day. At that rate, the cost per click for the first year (assuming you pay the
$60 to get in fast) is about a penny. However, as more competing sites get into
Mamma's Collection I expect the traffic won't be as high, but even so, it seems
like a decent deal for commercial sites.
Sponsored Listings on a Pay-Per-Click Search Engine
If the average visitor to your site earns you 10 cents in profit, and you can
get one by paying 5 cents, then you're in a position to make money. That's the
idea behind pay-per-click. Search engine results are ranked not by keywords, but
by how much you are willing to pay for a click. You bid for each keyword you
want to sponsor.
The two leaders in the field are Overture.com
(by far the big kahuna) and FindWhat.
The other sites aren't worth much, in my opinion. But the top two can make you
money if you use them correctly, and I strongly recommend that commercial sites
consider using them. I've written a detailed
tutorial devoted to techniques for efficiently bidding on these sites, as
well as Secret Net Tools (available to contributors) that help you find
appropriate keywords to bid on and manage your bids.
Future Trends
Looking into my crystal ball, I think it's pretty clear that the days of
effective free submission to the major search engines are numbered. This is a
classic example of "the tragedy of the commons". If a resource is
freely available to everyone, then nobody has any incentive to conserve it, and
everyone will try and exploit it as much as they can before the other guy ruins
it. The result, in a village common, is overgrazing; on search engines, it is
spam.
If on the other hand, you charge people a small amount for listings, they get a
lot more selective about what they submit. The quality of listings goes up. Spam
goes down. This is a good thing. Furthermore, let's be honest, it's in our
interests for the search engines to make money, because a bankrupt search engine
is no help to anyone.
Since at the present time, most of the search engines (except for Yahoo) are
losing money hand over fist, I think that all the major ones will adopt paid
inclusion plans similar to Inktomi. I think they'd be stupid not to.
Going out further on a limb, I will make a stunning prediction. I predict that
Yahoo will announce that they will start charging commercial sites a yearly
maintenance fee for listings, in addition to their listing fee. And by the way,
Yahoo guys, if you end up doing this because I suggested it, you owe me - small,
unmarked, non-sequentially numbered bills, please.
Update: On December 28th, 2001, Yahoo
started charging $299 a year for new listings. Old listings are grandfathered.
No package of money has arrived for me yet, but I live in hope.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Robert Woodhead is the webmaster at SelfPromotion.com,
the net's leading resource for do-it-yourself Web Promotion. Visit the site to
find all the information and automatic submission tools you'll need to do the
job quickly, efficiently, and most of all, properly! http://www.selfpromotion.com
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