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Cuil-ing Off The Volcanic Buzz
By: David Berkowitz 2008-07-30 Google Trends called the buzz on Cuil-related searches "volcanic." Their PR team is brilliant, scoring press in all the major papers and trades by playing up the size of its index... ...and how it's run by ex-Googlers. Surely a couple disgruntled former employees are the ones who can overtake the Googleplex, right? I mean, think of all those ex-PayPal guys who started that new payment platform, or ex-Amazon guys who started that major retail site... oh, umm, that hasn't happened? Well, there's always a first time, and why not do it in style by taking on the Google?! Alright, I can relax a bit. I already wrote something on Cuil for Ad Age, but I'll give you a little something extra here in a sec, and maybe I'll still have some more material for MediaPost on Thursday. I really hope there's something left to say by then, otherwise you can skip that. Here's how the Ad Age piece starts:
I first found out about Cuil 12:31am Monday, when the press release came my way, and I happened to be online at that hour. I was underwhelmed from the release; I wasn't expecting it to go anywhere. If I thought it was the story of the year, I'd have blogged about it right there. What I did was write back the sender. The release says it has the biggest index of any engine, beating the nearest rival by three times as much.
The contact there responded:
I reread Google's post, and she's right. The size of the index is debatable. Google hasn't seemed to report on it in awhile. That's because Google doesn't seem to care. I responded to the contact:
Now we have Cuil calling itself the "biggest search engine" with the largest index, and Google saying it has "the most comprehensive index." As I noted on 360i's Digital Connections blog, the real size that matters is the user base, and then the size and share of ad revenues. Index size means nothing. Meanwhile, several bloggers and journalists are reporting that Cuil is returning fewer search results for certain queries than Google. Several others have noted that the results are often irrelevant. In the categories to drill down for a search on "Cuil," you get Towns and Villages in Sligo, French Cuisine, French Breads, Lochaber, and Glens of Scotland. Cuil.com doesn't even rank on page one. If it thinks it's irrelevant for Cuil.com, then why would it be relevant for anyone else? CommentsTag: Cuil, Google, Search Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Have a bookmark! - About the Author: David Berkowitz is Director of Strategic Planning for 360i and oversees the Search Informed Marketing firm's Emerging Media Practice. Every Tuesday, he pens the Search Insider column for MediaPost, with over 100 articles published to date. He often speaks at events covering marketing, media, and technology; his previous engagements include Ad:Tech, Consumer Electronics Show - Digital Hollywood, MediaPost's Search Insider Summit, and many others. He has also blogged extensively with MarketersStudio.com, MarketingVox, nowEurope, AdTechBlog, and others. |
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