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Natural Search Engine Results - The Great Equalizer
by Scott Buresh
You scroll down past the banner
ads and enter your search term. You pass the "sponsored
results" without a glance. You ignore the shaded
results to the right, as well as the additional "sponsored
results" at bottom. Hiding somewhere in the middle
of it all, you finally find the results you came for.
Welcome to the world of natural
search engine results- a world where mom-and-pop shops
compete with million dollar companies, where million
dollar companies compete with billion dollar corporations.
And, while many will argue to the contrary, the playing
field is more or less level. Small companies can and
do dominate their behemoth competitors in this world,
for a variety of reasons.
What is natural search?
For those who aren't quite clear what the term means,
"natural" or "organic" search
describes the "editorial" search engine
results on any particular engine. These results are
purported to be completely non-biased - meaning that
the engine will not accept any amount of money to
influence the rankings of any individual sites. This
is quite different than the paid advertising that
appears in "sponsored" or "featured"
search engine results, in which higher positions are
rewarded for to the companies willing to pay the most
per visitor.
Why is natural search important?
Savvy searchers who understand the difference between
paid and natural results are more likely to hold the
natural search engine results in a higher regard,
much like a person reading a magazine would probably
be more positively influenced by an article about
a particular company than by a paid advertisement
from the company.
It is also likely that natural
search will become more important in the coming months.
Yahoo's new SiteMatch program, which mixes some paid
search engine results with natural results, is certain
to get some close scrutiny from the FTC (even though
the fees paid are not supposed to influence rankings).
This type of public attention will no doubt educate
some oblivious users as to what "sponsored results"
actually are. More importantly, other search engines
are likely to use this as a means of differentiation
from Yahoo. It is no coincidence that AskJeeves announced
that it was getting rid of its similar program the
day after Yahoo's new program was unveiled, claiming
that it was impossible to produce unbiased results
using this methodology. Microsoft also recently claimed
that they were taking steps to further differentiate
paid results from natural results. No matter what
the end result, one probable outcome of this new attention
to paid search engine advertising is that more average
searchers will learn the differences between paid
and natural search engine results, and many will instinctively
favor the latter.
What advantages do huge
corporations have?
Certainly, large companies do have some specific advantages
when it comes to natural search.
a. Links - the
primary advantage that large corporations have is
their ability to obtain large amounts of inbound links,
which can have a huge impact on search engine rankings.
Often these links are given freely without the company
asking (or being aware that it is happening). Many
of the huge corporation's vendors, affiliates, partners,
etc. are eager to show their association with the
company and link to the corporate site readily and
non-reciprocally. Large corporations can also facilitate
huge increases in link popularity through a simple
corporate policy requiring inbound links from any
companies wishing to work with them. In addition,
very large corporations may have several websites,
which can sometimes be effectively linked together
for additional link popularity.
b. Budget - although
history shows that a large percentage of major corporations
do not spend wisely in this arena, larger corporations
typically have larger marketing budgets then their
smaller competitors. However, this does not necessarily
mean that they will readily allocate a portion of
that budget for search engine optimization, as discussed
below.
What advantages do smaller companies have?
While the advantages of huge corporations, particularly
in the area of link popularity, can be difficult to
overcome, it is often unnecessary to try. A large
percentage of such companies consistently seem to
shoot themselves in the foot when it comes to natural
search engine optimization, a primary reason why small
companies can often outperform them in search engine
results. Specific advantages include:
a. A willingness to pursue
the channel - Smaller companies are typically
more willing to devote resources to natural search
than large corporations. Huge things have to happen
for a major corporation to get involved in this "new"
channel, a channel far removed from the traditional
marketing methodologies used to build the giant. Few
corporate underlings want to be the one to put their
neck on the line and recommend something completely
new and "unproven". Even when a large corporation
looks into natural search engine optimization as a
potential marketing tool, it can take many months,
and sometimes years, for a final decision to be made.
b. A willingness to change
the company website - Huge corporations face
similar problems when it comes to changing to the
corporate website. Within such entities, a person
can often not get so much as a comma removed from
the text of a secondary page without holding several
upper-level management meetings and, ultimately, making
a board presentation. Smaller, leaner companies are
able to approve necessary website changes more quickly,
and are almost always more willing to quickly adapt
to the needs of both visitors and search engines.
c. The willingness to outsource
- Larger companies have more internal resources at
their disposal, and are less likely to outsource this
specialized service to someone with proven experience.
Often, search engine optimization is treated as an
afterthought and dumped on an IT person, who typically
has too much to do already and will approach the problem
solely from a technical standpoint. Natural search
engine optimization is by necessity a combination
of marketing and technology. Newcomers to the field
(especially those who treat the discipline as strictly
a technical issue) often make fundamental mistakes
that at best do not get results and at worst put sites
at risk of penalization.
d. A lack of technical
hurdles - Huge corporations are more likely
to have technical issues on their website that can
prevent search engines from indexing all of their
pages. Often the pages of corporate websites are generated
"on the fly" from large databases, and such
pages (without modification to the URLs) are sometimes
never indexed. In addition, (although usability studies
are making this happen less often), some huge corporations
have their sites built entirely in flash or use other
technologies that are virtually invisible to search
engines.
The Bottom Line
To most huge corporations, search engine optimization
is often a very small piece of an enormous puzzle
- and it is a piece they have been doing without for
years. The necessary steps required to fully embrace
the channel are often enough to stop any well-intentioned
initiative in its tracks. As most search engine optimization
experts will tell you, some of the most egregious
search engine mistakes are consistently made by household
name companies - leaving their smaller, leaner competitors
the opportunity to take full advantage.
Our credits to the source/author of this article:
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Author: Scott Buresh
Scott Buresh is the CEO of Medium Blue Search Engine Marketing.
He has contributed content to many publications including Building Your Business with Google For Dummies (Wiley, 2004), MarketingProfs, ZDNet, SEO Today, WebProNews, DarwinMag, SiteProNews, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide. Medium Blue,an Atlanta search engine optimization company
, serves local and national clients, including Boston Scientific, DuPont, and Georgia-Pacific. To receive internet marketing articles and search engine news in your email box each month, register for Medium Blue’s newsletter, Out of the Blue.
This article is taken from the Medium blue website.
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