The latest news to hit the Internet’s ‘water fountain’ is
that Lycos and Ask Jeeves are to begin their own SEO services..
Search engine optimisation (or SEO) is any practice related
to the end goal of improving your website’s positioning in the search
engines.
The brief history of SEO is that it first started out solely
as the remit of the developers themselves.
This was back in the day when one person designed, built, maintained,
hosted and marketed a website.
The Ever-Changing Internet Landscape
During the past few years, however, the entire Internet
industry has divided up into a myriad divisions to such an extent that SEO is
now a booming sector in its own right.
Entering the term “seo†on Google returns
nearly 20 million results!
Now businesses recognise that it is no longer possible to
expect one individual or company to possess all the necessary skills ‘under
one roof’ to be able to achieve great results on the graphic design,
technical construction AND marketing of their website.
This has led to the trend of bringing in specialist search
engine marketing consultants or companies to assist.
As Google and the like are spending millions every year on
developing their tools to accurately sift through the billions of web pages
that exist it really is a full time occupation just keeping track of what has
an effect on search engine ranking and which strategies work best.
Everyone Wants ‘Organic’ Nowadays!
Ask Jeeves and Lycos are now offering their SEO service to
help companies get found in the ‘organic’ results of search engines.
‘Organic’ results are those results in a search engine
listing that are non-paid. Almost all
search engines now offer businesses the shortcut of simply paying to get an ad
listed whereas as a latest study indicates that only 28% of searchers will
click on an advertisement as opposed to one of the ‘organic’ results (on
Google).
This is the reason we’re all fighting for high rankings in
the ‘organic’ results. This demand
from businesses is also presumably the main driving factor behind Ask Jeeves
and Lycos starting to offer their own Search Engine Optimisation services.
Money Well Spent?
In short – I’m not sure.
If you have a 50 page website, getting Lycos to provide you
with SEO services will cost you a tidy $10,000.
They also include the questionable tactic of re-submitting your website
over and over to search engines which is both pointless and risky as some will
act against those that submit more than once.
$10,000 sounds like a lot to me for a service that is only
dealing with search engines and which talks of ‘recommendations’ that you
then have to implement yourself.
Really though – it comes down to what you are trying to
achieve with your website.
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