
Hello SearchNewz Readers!
If you list your site with Yahoo!, or advise clients to do
so, you may want to reconsider your strategy after reading
today’s article. Yahoo! has completely revised its search
rank tactics, and forking over additional cash won’t improve
your position with Yahoo!’s listings any longer. What can
you do to give your Yahoo! rank a boost? Read today’s article
by Tom McCracken of the Lorentz Consulting Group for details
regarding what Yahoo! has done, including what you can do
to keep your site’s ranking high.
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Want some free publicity for yourself or your site? Then head
on over to WebProNews (http://www.webpronews.com/2002/1121.html)
and check out the new Peer Review feature. If you review the
featured Web site and the editor selects your review, it will
be published in WebProNews along with a plug for you and your
site. It’s a great way to get a little free publicity for
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review – you can even review the featured site’s search engine
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criticism, you can put your own site out there for a critique,
too. Check it out.
Enjoy today’s issue!
Yahoo changes
to have major impact on SEO strategies
By Tom McCracken
On October 11, 2002, Yahoo made significant changes in the
way it performs searches. These changes are sure to cause
a dramatic shift in search engine optimization strategy for
most sites. This article will describe the changes, how you
should adjust your SEO strategy, and what to look for in the
future.

The Good Ole Days Our approach to search engine marketing
for our clients has been to start with only a few high ROI
opportunities. In the Good Ole Days (circa, 10/10/02) the
top ROI was almost always Yahoo Express Submit for $299 a
year. In just seven days, you ranked on the world’s most popular
search engine.
The process was fairly straightforward:
1. Get the phrases the client thinks people will use to find
the site. 2. Research to find the actual phrases people use,
and perhaps find a few gems that don’t have too much competition.
3. Submit to Yahoo with a quality description that includes
as many keywords as possible.
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After getting clients on Yahoo, building a business case for
other search engines became more complex. Yes, we like the
rest of the world focused on Google, the SE that gets the
second largest number of searches. However, Google’s PageRank
algorithm makes it complex to make traffic predictions.
Google, the double-edged sword Google uses both page content
and PageRank to determine results placement. Their content
ranking is similar to other popular SE such as MSN, AltaVista
and Lycos. In a nutshell, it works like this: put keywords
in your title, put them in the body text a few times, sprinkle
them in your alt tags, hyperlinks, comment tags, and you’re
good to go.
It is the PageRank component that gets complicated. The more
sites that link back to your site, the higher your page rank.
Yet PageRank is more complex than that, involving the text
in the links to your site and the popularity of the sites
that link to you.
We always recommend that clients do basic search engine optimization,
but how much they should spend is dependent on their existing
PageRank.
To illustrate - take the example of two of our clients, both
in the document management industry. The first project was
a brand new website (www.adjacent-tech.com) for a start-up
company. The second, a site redesign for an established mid-sized
firm with a 10-year history (www.isogen.com). For the start-up
we recommended only a few hours of basic page optimization,
and then started them on a campaign to get links from partners,
vendors, and other related sites. We recommended modest effort,
e.g. low cost, for page optimization because, for a new site
with low PageRank, the best optimized pages would not rank
higher than their competition.
Since the second project was a re-design,
they already had an established web site with the possibility
a quality PageRank. As it turned out, there were several PhDs
who sat on the W3C board (web standards organization) who
wrote white papers, whose pages linked back to the Isogen
site. After we salivated for a bit over their PageRank (a
Pavlovian reaction for web developers) we recommended extensive
optimization because they had a real chance of dominating
their rankings.
The Future, For Now So what does all this Google stuff have
to do with the Yahoo changes? Quite a bit actually.
Yahoo no longer displays its directory listings first in its
search results. Instead, it now skips the sites in its directory
to show Google’s listing. This means that a listing in Yahoo’s
directory will not help your search ranking. Thus there is
only one minor advantage to a Yahoo listing: some people search
for sites using Yahoo’s directory listing, but very few do
this in practice.
While it will take several months for the effects of this
change to be understood, one fact is clear - Google is king.
All your SEO effort should now go into Google.
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Is the change a good thing
or bad thing? The answer is complicated, and it depends on
who you are.
One of our websites, www.10minuteflash.com,
had a good position in Yahoo, and went from 200 hits a day
to 15. Another site, www.websitedesignpromotion.org, had a
weak description in Yahoo and lost only about 20% of its Yahoo
traffic. Our creative design division, www.leveltendesign.com,
was not listed in Yahoo at all and went from 0 to 40 hits
per day.
Many webmasters are very upset by Yahoo’s change. Some have
just paid, or even worse, had their clients pay $299 in the
weeks preceding 10/10/02, only to find their listings worthless
or at least “worth less.” Others, of course, have gained;
and not those that actually paid Yahoo to be listed.
Looking into the Crystal Ball Yahoo had to make a change;
they had progressively been loosing ground in the search engine
race. Ironically, most of their users were lost to Google.
It is my personal belief that the core problem with Yahoo
was the poor and inconsistent quality of the human created
text descriptions.
The new emphasis on Google will improve the quality of Yahoo’s
searches. However, now that the results are identical to Google,
there is no unique competitive advantage to use Yahoo. Additionally,
Yahoo will start to loose significant income, as webmasters
will no longer use Yahoo’s paid Express Submit. By some estimates,
Express Submit nets over $200,000 a day.
I believe we will see another change in Yahoo’s searches shortly.
It will probably weigh Google, or another 3rd party SE, with
their own directory listings. Thus a directory listing will
give you a boost in the rankings, making it again worthwhile
to pay for a listing.
This will be similar to what MSN has done with the LookSmart
directory and Inktomi page results, however, and it is not
like Yahoo to be a follower. So we may see the emergence of
a whole new model for us web consultants to research.
About the Author: Tom McCracken has over 12 years of experience
in software engineering. He has developed solutions to improve
customer service and communications for some of the world's
largest companies. With an education in chemical engineering
and economics from Johns Hopkins University, his background
includes: software development, human factors engineering,
project management, business strategy, marketing strategy,
and electronic design.
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