massivearticlelist.com
  Site Home :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Article
Search:   
 
 

5 Reasons Why You Are Losing Money If You Don't Podcast

Why should any business podcast? Probably not, unless of course they realize how much they are losin ... - Brandon Hong
 

Creating Multiple Streams Of Income Part 2

Choose Your Path To Success - Bob Power
 

Super Easy Steps To Blogging Success!

What is a blogger? A blogger is a cross between an educator, an entertainer and an orator; each blog ... - Rudolf Freidlander
 
 

Cisco CCNA Certification Exam Tutorial: Frame Relay DLCIs And Mappings

Learn the basics of Frame Relay DLCIs and how to map them from Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933. - Chris Bryant
 

Is Google Analytics Good For The Internet Marketing Industry?

First they gave us a good search engine. Then they gave us two gigabytes of free server space for em ... - Steve Jackson
 
 

Site Home –› Internet & Computers –› SEO Solutions
 

Vertical Creep in Search Results :: Should Organic Optimizers be Concerned?

 

Author: Rob Sullivan

This year, like many people, I wasnt able to attend. However, I wanted to keep up with the news, so I found a great source of reports and updates. I will summarize the most important sessions to the best of my ability.

In my opinion, one of the most crucial topics is Vertical Creep.

Vertical creep is when non-organic and non-paid results start occupying top spots in search results. Verticals started showing up in search results back when Altavista was popular, and since then have grown into a much more sophisticated part of the overall search engine results page. Greg Jarboe was the first to speak of vertical creep and introduced everyone to verticals.

All the engines have verticals in some form or another nowadays. Google has its famous OneBox which is generally the place immediately below the top sponsored ads but immediately above the organic results. This is where you will find news, Froogle, and image results which may match a query.

For example, I wrote a few weeks ago about how, when you searched for Olympics on Google, you were presented with video results at the top of the page. But it doesnt stop there. Do a search for New Orleans, for example, and in Google you are presented with not only news results but also map results, pushing the organic results down so that only the top 2 or 3 results are showing. Much less than the typical 4 or 5 we are used to seeing.

One of the biggest impacts of Verticals is the stretching of the search results page. It is becoming ever clearer that everything but the top 1 or 2 organic is worth less because it could be pushed below the fold, whereas sponsoreds value is increasing because there are less organic results visible.

According to Gord Hotchkiss, however, the impact on verticals, at least on Yahoo! And MSN, isnt as great. His firm has recently completed research on how users interact with search engines. The Yahoo! MSN research performed by Hotchkiss firm is a follow up to Google research the firm completed last year at this time.

According to Hotchkiss, Google does a better job of incorporating Verticals into results. Google users are more accepting of them while Yahoo! and MSN users tend to scan more of the results on a page, thereby negating the impact verticals have on organic results.

This could mean a couple of things. First, as Hotchkiss suggests, Google may have trained its users. We are used to seeing the verticals (and hit bolding and inconsistently displayed sponsored results) and are therefore more accepting to the varying page changes, while Yahoo! and MSN users are less forgiving, perhaps because they feel the results displayed are less relevant. This isnt too hard to believe considering he gave an example of searching for New York Pizza on MSN and NOT getting pizza places but getting news about pizza in New York.

Personally, I too have experienced this, especially with MSN. It seems to have more of a problem determining what types of verticals are relevant to the searcher.

Bob Carilli was up next and presented a case study on how effective verticals have been for one of his clients.

Through some analysis they found that Froogle shopping results were showing up a lot for his clients competitive keyword terms, yet the Froogle listings were unoptimized.

They responded by creating a data feed for Froogle which was optimized to target these great phrases which had poor Froogle listings. As a result, his clients site quickly moved to the top of the Froogle listings for those phrases. While it is unclear, I would assume this would have translated into similar top rankings in the Google area where Froogle is displayed.

This also shows that, as search marketers, we shouldnt rely solely on SEO or PPC. There are dozens of verticals out there we could tap into if we had an open mind.

If you look at Google alone, there are opportunities in Google News (with properly optimized press releases), Froogle, as mentioned above, Google Local, Google Base, Google Video and more. Similarly, with Yahoo! and MSN there are verticals to research. Both engines also have a shopping portal, as well as news, video and local results.

In the end, verticals could become the poor mans SEO tactic. If you cant compete organically and cant pay for top sponsored, perhaps you can optimize your product feed to appear ahead of all your competitors?

Author Bio:

Rob Sullivan is a SEO Consultant and Writer for Textlinkbrokers.com. Textlinkbrokers is the trusted leader in building long term rankings through safe and effective link building. Please provide a link directly to Textlinkbrokers when syndicating this article.

You can also reach this article by using: Vertical Creep in Search Results :: Should Organic Optimizers be Concerned?, Internet & Computers
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
How The Web Works
 
Wanted - Sheep for the Marketing Flock?
 
Web Hosting for the Rest of Us
 
Viral Marketing - A Brief Overview
 
How Blogs Can Be An Excellent Promotional Tool
 
DESIGN ISSUE FOR CREDIBLE WEBSITE
 
Free Internet Software
 
How to Get the Highest Search Engine Rankings
 
How to Optimize Your Online Business Collaborations
 
Cheap Web Hosting: Cheap Gets You Free Stuff?
 
 
 
Add Url
 
 

Children & Teens

 

Employment & Careers

 

Policies & Law

 

Automotive

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

People & Communities

 

Food & Recipe

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Banking & Finance

 

Garden & Home

 

Art & Creative

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Companies & Business

 

Science & Research

 

News & Events

 

Outdoor & Sports

 

Internet & Computers

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Realty & Property

 

Self Help

 

Music & Entertainment

 

Tour & Travel

 

Education & Learning

 

Hygiene & Health

 
Site Home :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions
© 2006-2008 www.massivearticlelist.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.