July 20th, 2009 by sean · No Comments
At the end of May Microsoft announced its new search engine, Bing. As data from Bing’s first full month becomes available, I thought it would be interesting to take a quick look at the current market share enjoyed by the major search engines in the US and a “typical” European market, Italy. The real test of Bing’s success will to be to check back in a few months to see if Bing has picked up traction with users or not. As the folks from Cuil can attest, a burst of publicity doesn’t necessary translate into loyal search users.
Search Engine statistics, USA vs. Italy
Most web intelligence services are currently US centric with very little worldwide reach. Unless stated otherwise, the data which follows is for the US market. Where available, I’ve also provided data for the Italian market, which for search engine usage is rather typical of most west European markets.
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Tags:Alexa·Ask.com·Bing·Compete·comScore·Google·Google Trends·Hitwise·Nielsen·SEO·StatCounter·Yahoo!
April 28th, 2009 by sean · 6 Comments
It may seem like a cliché but on the web no website is an island. Any site worth its salt will have accumulated inbound links and will most certainly contain outbound links to other resources on the web. Indeed, one can easily say that without links to interconnect websites, there wouldn’t be a worldwide web.
For search engines, such as Google, incoming links provide a strong signal as to the authority of a website. If multiple websites link to a specific website for a given topic, there is a good chance the website cited by others is deemed to be highly relevant for a good reason. Google and other search engines identify the theme of a website page by analyzing a page’s content and the text of the incoming links – the underlined text you click on to arrive at a page. Links, especially inbound links, are thus one of the most significant in the over 200 factors Google considers in its ranking algorithms. Inbound links from related sites in a business’ sector are also an excellent source of highly qualified direct traffic.
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Tags:Alexa·Analyze Links·Ask.com·Backlinks·Baidu (百度)·Buy Links·Exalead·Free Links·Gigablast·Google Page Rank·Inbound Links·Link Building·Link Popularity·Majestic SEO·Meta Tags·Microsoft MSN Live·Naver (네이버)·nofollow·PageRank·Rambler (Рамблер)·Ranking·Search Engine Optimization·Search Engine Ranking·SEO·SEO Tools·SEOmoz LinkScape·Sogou (搜狗)·Text Links·Website Ranking·Yahoo! Site Explorer·Yandex (Яндекс)
September 23rd, 2008 by sean · No Comments
An ongoing question in search engine optimization (SEO) projects regards which directories might be useful for increasing incoming traffic to a web site and as a means in obtaining better search engine visibility. The question arises due to the importance that was once attributed by search engines to some directories and by the desire to attract direct traffic to a site, where and whenever possible.
For a new site, directories, short reviews of sites organized by categories and subcategories, can be a useful source of incoming links.
However, it is highly doubtful that most directories today help very much in improving search engine visibility, nor in generating much direct traffic.
There are multiple reasons:
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Tags:Alexa·Directory·DMOZ·Google·links·Open Directory·Page Rank·PageRank·SEO·SEO Myths·Yahoo!
July 2nd, 2007 by sean · No Comments
In the course of a search engine optimization project, I’m often asked during the competitor analysis phase why one website ranks highly in Alexa, while another ranks highly in an other statistics supplier’s top websites survey.
As our two part article Web statistics for internet market research: pick a number, any number illustrates, there are a plethora of services offering web statistics. Website owners often cite their Alexa rank to demonstrate how much more important their site is compared to a competitor’s. Other website owners will pay for Nielsen//Netratings panel research, a sampling technique born in the 1930s which surveys about 0% of Italy’s adult population – no wonder then the IAB has called this technique outdated.
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Tags:Alexa·Blog Statistics·BlogBabel·Compete·comScore·Hitwise·IAB·Nielsen//NetRatings·Quantcast·Search Engine Optimization·SEM·SEO·WAA·Web Analytics·Worst Practice
July 2nd, 2007 by sean · 3 Comments
How to perform competitor research using web statistics while avoiding lies, damned lies, and …statistics?
Comparison with competitors is a fundamental element of business; even innovators need to know how far ahead they are in their market. The Internet seems to offer fertile terrain for capturing accurate marketing statistics on website usage and position relative to other players in a given market. Indeed, most of us have often heard web statistics from Nielsen//NetRatings, Alexa or comScore cited in the press and elsewhere. Practitioners of Search Engine Optimization and web marketing know that web analytics is not just silo analysis of a company’s website: it also entails looking at how a website and its business performance metrics measure up in the overall web ecosystem.
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Tags:Alexa·comScore·Hitwise·Nielsen·Quantcast·Web Analytics·Web Marketing·Web Statistics
May 1st, 2007 by sean · 1 Comment
Expats in Italy need to stay on top of professional and daily happenings locally while still engaging in the wider world. This task is made difficult by the vast quantity and quality of resources available in English (my native language), as exemplified by the BBC. Unfortunately, their Italian equivalents, such as the ad-infested public broadcaster RAI, just can’t compete for my attention.
It doesn’t get much easier on the web marketing front. The primary search engines in Italy are the US based Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft Live and Ask, sometimes found in their rebranded skins: Arianna (enhanced by Google) and Virgilio (listed by Google as a customer). Inevitably, most of my web marketing reading is English language centric.
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Tags:Alexa·Ask·Barcamp Italia·Blog Statistics·BlogBabel·Conferences·Feedburner·Google·Microsoft Windows Live·Technorati·Top Blogs·Web Analytics·Yahoo!·ZenaCamp