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Jason Calacanis may backtrack, Kathy Sierra cancels appearance at e-Tech, ComputerWorld tips on domain names

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Jason Calacanis may backtrack, Kathy Sierra cancels appearance at e-Tech, ComputerWorld tips on domain names

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David A. Utter
Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Beating The Unbeatable Google

Topix CEO Rich Skrenta thinks someone out there can compete with Google, and he offered suggestions on how that might happen (hint: think vertically).


Editor's Note: As Google swallows up market share it becomes uncomfortably clear that trying to compete with them is a non-starter. Google doesn't have a true monopoly, but any would-be competitor has to face likely marginalization. Google's Matt Cutts invited Skrenta's readers to consider: What's the best way to compete with Company X? We think that's a good question, and you're just the folks to ask. Replace "X" with Google and let us know what you think.

Choose your poison: Google in search or Google in advertising. If you've ever heard of the phrase "Hobson's choice", picking a competitive ground with Google looks more like no choice at all.

Skrenta thinks differently, even though it was he who suggested Google is the environment a couple of months back. His most recent thoughts on beating Google read more like a primer of why it can't be done head to head.

"A conventional attack against Google's search product will fail," Skrenta said. "They are unassailable in their core domain."

Kind of tosses the 'how to beat Google' theme out the window straightaway.

"You need both a great product and a strong new brand," he writes. "Both are hard problems."

The shoemaker Nike demonstrated this. Over the years as Phil Knight and company built the brand, it took quite a while before they were confident enough to put the swoosh on their products like hats and shirts without the word 'Nike'.

So you can't beat Google on search. You can't beat them on brand; Google is a dictionary word that to Internet users means search. It's like traveling in the South and ordering a soda at lunchtime. Everything is a Coke, even if it's a Sprite or a Mr. Pibb.

Where next? Skrenta suggested the vertical approach without coming out and calling it that:
You need to position your product to sub-segment the market and carve out a new niche. Or better, define an entirely new category. See Ries on how to launch a new brand into a market owned by a competitor. If it can be done in Ketchup or Shampoo, it can be done in search.
Google came about as many people sought to solve a great problem of the rapidly growing Internet with search. Once Google emerged by doing what people wanted - giving them a quality result immediately - most competitors fell by the wayside. Yahoo is the closest and they still trail Google by roughly 20 percent in the US search market.

That's general web search. Vertical search has become a rising field; witness the heated competition and product launches in the local search segment alone. Healthcare stands out with sites like Kosmix and Healthline delving into quality resources for their search results.

That's sub-segmenting the market. Skrenta nails the wisdom needed here by observing "The editorial value of search is in the index, not the interface." Google has proven that less is more with a minimalist approach.

Keeping that approach in mind goes along with Skrenta's later points: users tend to want to type two words in a box, and they aren't interested in fancy-schmancy "clusters, or tags, or categories, or directory tabs, or pulldowns. Ever."

Beating Google? Probably not going to happen right away. The winners in search will probably be the hyper-focused verticals, which makes sense. When creating an online business, entrepreneurs try to fill a niche. Search should work out the same way.

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About the Author:
David A. Utter is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.
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Blogosphere Responds To Death Threats

Download CounterSpy Enterprise Today! Click Here
Joe Lewis By Joe Lewis
Editor | WebProNews

A tidal wave of shock has swelled across the blogosphere at large in response to publicized death threats targeting well-known blogger Kathy Sierra.

Any profession that operates within the public domain comes with its share of pitfalls. Blogging is no exception.

Sometimes criticism crosses appropriate boundaries. There’s certainly a tipping point between spirited disagreement and personal attack, something that popular blogger Kathy Sierra has unfortunately had to learn the hard way.

In her latest (and perhaps final) blog post, Sierra documents a series of attacks upon her by other bloggers at meankids.org and unclebobisms.com, both of which have since been taken offline. The textual assaults ranged from obscene death threats to extremely graphic depictions of misogynistic imagery created from actual photos of Sierra.

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Rafael Robinson

Keywords in URL

Our featured post today comes from M & C. They need your help figuring out if the words in a URL would make any difference in ranking in the search engines. The example given is that instead of using /products/male, use /gifts/male since it would seem to be a little more friendly.

Think you can help M & C out? Tell us at WebProWorld.

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|| Rafael||


Choice of words in file path

How important are the words in a file path web address for SEO?

As a website owner of an online gift shop, I see my site uses a file path with the word "products" on before the special category of gift, e.g.: "giftboxes.co.nz/products/male". If I were to use /gifts/male, would that be likely to get a better response from Google?

I realize it could set me back and cause major headaches to change this now but as I'm considering making another similar site, would it be helpful keyword-wise to use the word "gifts" instead of "products" on the file path address to improve ratings?

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