By Mike Banks Valentine
The ground moves with a confusing shift sideways, followed by a
bump, then a lurch and finally a massive rumbling explosion that
splits the earth and swallows whatever is in its path on the surface.
This happens with disturbing regularity lately and aftershocks knock
formerly solid firms off their strong foundations. Infoseek, Go.com,
Direct Hit and Excite collapse.
Yahoo! swallows Inktomi, Overture absorbs AltaVista and Fast Search
in quick succession as AskJeeves subsumed Teoma and LookSmart encircled
and enclosed WiseNut in those previous SearchQuakes. The devastation
is immediate and stunning to those standing on what they thought
was solid ground before the quake struck and shook the searchscape
beneath them.
This shifting and rumbling landscape is not a place for the timid.
Search engine optimization specialists [SEO's] scan and survey the
wreckage and dig through the resulting rubble to find the surviving
strategies that will pull their clients to the top of search results
and out of that rubble to the surface. There is often a dazed stillness
that follows such natural disasters while survivors sort out what
to do now that everything has changed with one sweeping event. SEO's
are rescue workers on scene clearing debris and rebuilding.
Admittedly, it's not all that dramatic for most small to medium
sized businesses on the web. But it does mean that they need a professional
on the case for them keeping them abreast of changes. The earthquake
analogy probably only applies to those deeply involved in web business,
almost as though web businesses live on the other side of the planet
from the disastrous shift in the search landscape - jerking portal
partnerships and often disastrously disturbing other industry alliances
that had settled into working relation- ships. Everyone is nervously
checking to see if any damage is done to their own partnerships
and who may be injured?
Unlike earthquakes, searchquakes seem to occur with reasons, but
still tend to be unexpected and sudden. Directories buy up crawler-based
search engines in order to have an in-house solution to provide
backup results when unable to provide results from the directory
database. Overture's pay-per-click engine now provides PPC results
to organic [free] search engines. Everyone wonders what effect their
purchases may have on existing partnerships Overture maintains with
search sites that previously saw themselves as competitors to both
of these acquisition targets, Fast/AllTheWeb and AltaVista.
Existing partners are beginning to fret that Overture is threatening
their territory of crawler-based search. Yahoo! stated in their
press release that the paid inclusion facet of Inktomi was attractive
and contributed to that purchase. The paid inclusion facets of both
AltaVista and FastSearch through it's partnership with Lycos are
now part of Overture. Yahoo! paid $235 million for Inktomi. Overture
will spend about that amount for both of it's acquisitions combined.
So we are looking at deals in the search industry of nearing one-half
Billion dollars! Rarefied territory above the valley at the foot
of Search Mountain!
Google previously provided back-up results to Yahoo! and now may
be dropped as a search partner due to the perception that they are
becoming competitors with PPC and Shopping search. MSN looks warily
at Inktomi wondering whether they might be a threat. Indeed, MSN
might be the only search provider that has failed to swallow competitors
in an odd twist that leaves them with little to offer outside their
partnerships.
MSN dropped their support of RealNames, and essentially killed them
and even though new so-called 'Navigational Keyword' competition
is heating up with players iGetNet.com, NetWord.com and UDDI.org
- the paid navigation schemes are like bubbling mudpots compared
to volcanic activity of the webs' biggest search properties. For
more on these tiny geysers and mudpots, view Danny Sullivan's articles
below.
http://searchenginewatch.com/sereport/02/06-realnames.html
http://www.searchenginewatch.com/sereport/02/10-namespaces.html
It will be interesting in the long term though, as each engine buys
up competing services to become more independent. Will any of those
search properties need each other when every one of them have their
own paid inclusion, pay-per-click, shopping search, news search,
image search, blogger search, directory, financial channel, auto
channel, auction channel, music channel, etc. Aren't they headed
back toward the mostly failed portal model that commentators are
pointing to for the reason AltaVista failed, the reason Yahoo! wobbles
under its own sheer size and weight, the reason they each had for
becoming more like Google?
Meanwhile, Google purchased Blogger recently in a move that many
search industry pundits are still analyzing for its effect on the
web landscape. Whatever the result, one thing is quite apparent
in the shifting and eroding scenery of search engines. The conclusion
can only be that search matters on the web. It matters to all businesses
that require visibility in the ever narrowing canyons and soaring
peaks of the search landscape.
Just like the natural disaster of earthquakes, it all seems so senseless
sometimes. We'll all dust off and move on now. But you've got to
wonder if there's an end in sight to the ever shifting territorial
lines in this treacherous SearchQuake ridden terrain. ;-)
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