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    Beanstalk's SEO News Blog

    At Beanstalk Search Engine Optimization we know that knowledge is power. That's the reason we started this SEO blog. We know that the better informed our visitors are, the better the decisions they will make for their websites and their online businesses. We hope you enjoy your stay and find the SEO news contained within this blog useful.


    October 11, 2007

    MSN Takes A Blow

    As if the folks over in Microsoft’s search division didn’t have enough woes in their lives lately (and by “lately” I mean for all the years after people started using search engines) the data released by ComScore yesterday paints a bleak picture. Until yesterday they were at least able to call themselves one of the big three. It appears that they can no longer claim even that. And who is the engine that overtook them? Could Ask finally be making some moves forward? No, the “newcomer” is likely an engine most of you may not have heard of if you’re from North America. The engine is Baidu.com and it’s the primary search engine in China (did you think that might have been Google.cn after all the hoopla over their expansion into there and the debates over their censoring search results?)

    The current marketshare for August 2007 breaks down as follows:

    Search Property Searches
    Worldwide 61,033,000,000
    Google Sites 37,094,000,000
    Yahoo! Sites 8,549,000,000
    Baidu.com Inc 3,253,000,000
    Microsoft Sites 2,166,000,000
    NHN Corporation 2,044,000,000
    eBay 1,319,000,000
    Time Warner Network 1,212,000,000
    Ask Network 743,000,000
    Fox Interactive Media 683,000,000
    Lycos, Inc. 441,000,000

    Another interesting fact is that this does not include access from cyber cafes or cell phones and PDA’s. The Asian market is lightyears ahead of us in their us of their portable devices as full-scale Internet devices which could further influence the results in favor of engines such as Baidu.com if they were counted.

    Another good question you might want to ask is, who the heck is NHN Corporation? They’re a Korean engine and they’re right on the heels of Microsoft as well.

    Does this reflect a dramatic shift in the engines? In my opinion, not really. We’re all used to hearing the data relative to North American or US-based numbers. This is the first comprehensive study of worldwide search behavior that we have been exposed to (that I’ve heard of at least) and it appears that the Asian market is far more active that many of us may have assumed. In retrospect, if we had really though of it, would we have been surprised? I for one am not shocked by the data but it has reminded me that there are important markets outside of North America and Europe and it’s high time we started paying closer attention to them.

    To read the full take on the ComScore data you can read the ComScore press release from yesterday here.

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:15 pm


     

    September 19, 2007

    Congratulations To Jessica Bowman !!!

    Jessica Bowman.Earlier today Jessica Bowman, of Business.com announced on her blog that she will be leaving her position with Business.com to become Yahoo!’s Sr. Technical Marketing Manager.

    Jessica has earned here right to stand among the major players with insightful analysis of both SEO/SEM and how to work successfully as an in-house SEO. I’ve had the opportunity to chat with Jessica on a number of occasions at SES events and have been repeatedly impressed by both her charm and her intelligence.

    We at Beanstalk would like to extend our sincere congratulations to Yahoo! for this acquisition.

    SEO news blog post by @ 4:02 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: ,

     

    July 25, 2007

    MSN Making Gains On Search Marketshare

    Well it’s finally happened, the fine folks over at Redmond seem to be making at least some minor gains against Google and Yahoo! After literally years of losing search market share (due in large part to an under appreciation for what search would mean in the early days) MSN is finally making gains against the search giants.

    The latest ComScore results are out and they show the following for the major engines:

    • Google sites dropped from 50.7% market share in May 2007 to 49.5% in June showing a drop of 1.2%
    • Yahoo! sites dropped from 26.4% market share in may to 25.1% in June with an overal drop of 1.3%
    • Microsoft sites rose from 10.3% to 13.2% from May to June with an overall gain of 2.9%
    • The Ask network held steady at 5.0% market share
    • The Time Warner Network dropped from 4.6% to 4.2% between May and June of 2007

    Some other points from their stats:

    • Americans conducted 8.0 billion searches online in June, up 6 percent versus May and up 26 percent versus June 2006.
    • Google Sites led the pack with 4.0 billion search queries performed, followed by Yahoo Sites (2.0 billion), Microsoft Sites (1.1 billion), Ask Network (403 million), and Time Warner Network (341 million). Despite declining in search market share in June, both Google Sites and Yahoo! Sites enjoyed increases in search query volume.
    • Microsoft Sites experienced a significant increase in search query volume (up 36 percent) and search market share (up 2.9 share points) in June, due in large part to Live Search Club, a program launched by Microsoft in late May to engage and reward users of Live Search.

    We of course would once again like to extend our sincere thanks to ComScore for making this information available.

    Please note that the variables used to power our free keyword activity tool have been updated to reflect the new marketshare numbers.

    SEO news blog post by @ 2:07 pm


     

    May 8, 2007

    Yahoo! Paid Links Workaround (oh, and it does other stuff too)

    Yahoo! has recently launched the robots-nocontent tag. What this tag allows webmasters to do is specify portions of their pages that are not relevant to the content on that specific page. The biggest effect will likely be in the area of paid links and advertising. At least, I’m guessing that’s what Yahoo! is hoping.

    In their blog post on the subject they note many possible uses for the robots-nocontent tag including using it for universal navigation that may contain terms and links unrelated to the topic of the page, headers (for similar reasons), legal disclaimers, and – of course – advertising.

    As with their launch of the noodp tag I find myself wanting to pat Yahoo! on the back for another good tag developed. This tag allows webmasters to further control how content is read by the search engine without penalizing them for the need to tailor to the human visitor (universal navigation for example). It also allows for webmasters to remove advertising from the calculations thus further increasing the control we have over what types on content are calculated in our onsite factors.

    A note however, Yahoo! has noted that links contained within these sectors that don’t have the rel=”nofollow” tag on them will still be counted so this isn’t a ticket to slap up some poker link ads on your site thinking Yahoo! won’t see them. They will and unless you have a gaming site of your own, it’s not going to end well.

    Down the road I’m betting we’ll see this go further with links within these areas that aren’t pointing to other resources within the same site being devalued. They’re not related to the page content remember?

    SEO news blog post by @ 2:17 pm


     

    February 26, 2007

    Yahoo! Click Throughs On The Rise

    Good news came to Yahoo! and it’s advertisers today in the form of a ComScore report. For those of you who read this blog regularly or, to be more accurate, any SEO blog regularly, you’ll recall that back on February 5th Yahoo! launched it’s new advertising system Panama. As one could expect, the changes have been monitored closely by Yahoo!

    ComScore today released their finding on the changes in click through rates on Yahoo! ads. And they are:

    • Week Ending 2/11/07 – 5% increase
    • Week Ending 2/18/07 – 9% increase

    Now, these number may not seem impressive, after all – they’re only single digit increases however when we consider that we’re dealing with over 60 million searches per day in the US alone and that this increase takes them from a 10.1% advertising click through rate to 11.1% this reflects an additional 600,000 advertiser clicks per day. this is 219,000,000 additional click per year which is going to easily translate into many MANY millions of dollars in revenue for Yahoo!

    You can read ComScore’s full release here.

    SEO news blog post by @ 2:28 pm

    Categories: Uncategorized
    Tags: , ,

     

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