If the topic of search engine promotion sounds interesting, but
you're not quite sure if you want to deal with submitting to an
engine or directory and then waiting for results, there is one
search service that eliminates the confusion and ranks sites
purely on one factor: how much a business is willing to pay for
a listing. This pure-market-based service is called Overture
(formerly GoTo.com), and it can generate extremely targeted
leads and referrals to businesses willing to pay for them.
Overture operates on a competitive bidding structure. Businesses
place per-click bids on specific keyword phrases, such as
"automotive parts" or "golf shoes", and the higher the per-click
bid a business makes, the higher the ranking that business will
receive for that phrase. For example, if Company A places a
$0.30 per-click bid on the phrase "motorcycle repair manual",
and Company B bids $0.29 per click on the same phrase, Company
A's listing will appear before that of Company B. This sounds
pretty straightforward, and it is, but there are two factors
that are crucial for success with Overture - keyword selection
and tracking.
To begin with, a company must analyze how customers search for
the products or services they offer, and more specifically, the
keyword phrases that are used to find the products or services
offered. There is one maxim here that should not be ignored: The
more specific the keyword phrase that is bid on, the more
targeted the results. For example, the owner of a small used
book store may be inclined to bid on terms like "books", "used
books", and "book store", but searches on phrases like these
would not generate targeted leads. To find good phrases for our
book store owner to bid on, we need to dig a little deeper into
her business. Perhaps, because the bookstore is in the Houston
medical center area, she has a large selection of used medical
books. This would give her a competitive advantage in selling
these types of books, so she should try to find phrases that
people use to find used medical books online. Phrases like
"medical book store", "used medical books", and "discount
medical books" would be good phrases to bid on because the
people searching on them would be good customers for her
business.
The second factor that a bidder at Overture must address is the
issue of tracking. If a business doesn't know which search
phrases it's leads are coming from, that business can waste a
good deal of time and money. This is where Web programming
technologies such as PHP, PERL, and ASP can be extremely useful.
Without going into too much detail, these technologies can be
used to track a customer from click to sale.
If you are interested in Overture, you should read over some of
the resources available from their site at
http://www.overture.com/. But there is one resource that you
won't find unless you are a business that uses Overture, and it
is located at
http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/.
This second link is to their Search Term Suggestion tool, and it
is a useful tool for determining keywords and phrases that are
used in searches. It's also a pretty good all-around marketing
tool to find out what's hot online.
About the author:
Alan is the lead developer for InfoServe Media, LLC
(http://www.infoservemedia.com/), a Web development company that
specializes in Web site design, hosting, domain name
registration, and promotion for small businesses.