Pay-per-click listings are becoming more and more popular with the search engines because they return relevant results
Why do 9 of the major search engines feature
Pay-per-click listings on the first page of search
results?
The answer is simple. Search engines are becoming
commercialized.
Pay-per-click listings are becoming more and more
popular with the search engines because they return
relevant results. And the reason for this is that
website owners are not going to pay for keywords that
are not relevant.
The largest of the Pay-Per-Click search engines at the
moment is GoTo.com and it is no coincidence that its
paid listings can be found on the first page of search
results on 9 of the major search engines. If you do a
search at AOL, Netscape, Lycos, Hotbot, NBCi (formerly
Snap), or CompuServe, you will find that the top 2 or
3 listings, sometimes called sponsored links or
featured listings, are the same as the search results
on GoTo.com.
Mamma.com also includes GoTo.com listings in its top
10 results and at Ask Jeeves there is a section at the
bottom of the page that links to results from
Mamma.com, NBCi, Streamsearch.com and GoTo.com, so 3
of these options will return one or more of GoTo.com
listings.
Dogpile, a popular metasearch engine, provides results
from 2 pay-per-click search engines, GoTo.com and
FindWhat.com.
Pay-per-clicks are being increasingly used because of
their high relevancy to the search results, and
because the search engines have to make their money
from somewhere.
What about the website owners? There are 2 points of
view. One is that search engines should be free and
robot-spidered and that paying for traffic produces
biased results because only those that can afford to
advertize will be noticed.
However on the other hand, the web has become so large
and there is so much competition to be in the top 10
results, that results had become biased by another
factor - technical know-how. Those sites that had
search engine experts promoting them got to the top,
not necessarily the best sites. If you can't be found
on the first 2 or 3 pages of results you may as well
not even be listed. So in a way, the Pay-per-clicks
are restoring equilibrium.
There is one catch however, most of the popular
keywords have become expensive to bid for, so the
trick is to know how much each keyword or phrase is
worth to you. You will also have to bid for words in
the niche areas that other sites are not bidding for.
There is a very good free course that teaches you how
to do this, and you can get it by sending a blank
email to mailto:tams5pp@sitesell.net.
You can get a list of the major Pay-per-Click search
engines at http://www.TheWebsEYE.com/pay-per-click.htm
including a list of UK sites.
So the pay-per-click listings are featuring more and
more in searches, but what about the rest of the
search results. The leading search engines are
constantly trying to improve the relevancy of their
results and to achieve this, there is an increasing
weight being given to the theme of a website and to
the number and quality of links from other sites.
The robot-spiders will increasingly look to see how
relevant a keyword is over a number of pages on a
website, not just one page. This means that theme
based content rich websites are going to achieve
better results. The other advantage of producing a
content-rich site is that other websites will want to
link to it, and this again will add some weight to the
relevancy on the search engines.
The keywords and phrases on each individual page
however are still very important because these are the
building blocks that the search engines must use to
index your pages.
One of the most revolutionary tools to come out of the
internet marketing gurus this year is going to be Site
Build It! - http://buildit.sitesell.com/5pp.html -
This tool automatically optimizes your meta tags,
keyword densities, etc... and leaves you to
concentrate on writing valuable content for your web
pages.
While most of the other search engine optimizing tools
concentrate on giving each web page a high keyword
relevancy, this one focuses on developing a site
theme, but at the same time optimizing each web page
for a certain keyword or phrase. It is a tool that can
work with the search engines and not against them.
To stay ahead in business you have to be one step
ahead of your competition, and this is nowhere more
true than on the world wide web. Sites focused on a
particular theme are likely to make their way to the
top of the search engines in the near future and to be
amongst the leaders you have to act now.