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Google Tests "Commercial" Results In Organic Listings

Discussion in 'Google' started by iShopHQ, Aug 19, 2005.

  1. #1
    iShopHQ, Aug 19, 2005 IP
    brittanyk likes this.
  2. GuyFromChicago

    GuyFromChicago Permanent Peon

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    #2
    "A Google spokesperson assured ClickZ News the results are not paid listings, saying the demarcated results are a search relevancy experiment. "
     
    GuyFromChicago, Aug 19, 2005 IP
  3. iShopHQ

    iShopHQ Peon

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    #3
    Yeah, I read that.....

    Honest officer. I only had two beers. And that was hours ago!

    They're not paid listings..... yet. HOpefully they never will be
     
    iShopHQ, Aug 19, 2005 IP
  4. GuyFromChicago

    GuyFromChicago Permanent Peon

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    #4
    I hope we don't see the day when they mix paid and "organic" results. Who knows though....
     
    GuyFromChicago, Aug 19, 2005 IP
  5. longcall911

    longcall911 Peon

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    #5
    I agree. I used to use Dogpile and Webcrawler. Then they introduced sponsored listings. I stopped using them. Now, they're 100% paid inclusion and no one cares because no one at all uses them.

    I get about 300 uniques a day in my niche market, and in the past year I think I've gotten one dogpile referral and definitely no webcrawler or metacrawler. I suspect that their only visitors are clickbots.

    /*tom*/
     
    longcall911, Aug 19, 2005 IP
  6. d360

    d360 Grunt

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    #6
    d360, Aug 22, 2005 IP
  7. expat

    expat Stranger from a far land

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    #7
    I think these are simple tests to get results for further commercialising above the fold.

    The squeeze is on with Y M A gaining and investors wanting more.....

    Expat
     
    expat, Aug 23, 2005 IP
  8. Sharpseo

    Sharpseo Peon

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    #8
    I saw an example of this yesterday while doing a search, it was a big old block in the middle of the results. It was instantly obvious to me that it was an advertisement, not "mixed" results.

    What worries me is that these top ads, side ads, and middle of search ads could really take a chunk out of natural traffic that publishers receive.

    Of course, some users would be more inclined to use other search engines. And Ad Blocking software would probably become more prevelant over time. Implementing it would probably mean bigtime $ in the short term, big negative over the long term, in my opinion.
     
    Sharpseo, Aug 23, 2005 IP
  9. hajamie

    hajamie Peon

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    #9
    I'd switch to msn. i hate yahoo more than m$
     
    hajamie, Aug 23, 2005 IP
  10. Old Welsh Guy

    Old Welsh Guy Notable Member

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    #10
    There have been rulings about not making paid adverts clearly recognisable as such. I fear we are drifting towards overkill on Google. well over half the average joe surfer does not know what a 'sponsored link' means. I have asked many many people about it and the bulk of them did not realise that these were paid ads that were there purely because they pay to be.

    If these people find that the sponsored ads are not as good as they used to be, then google will suffer. MSN are poised to pounce on the search market with the launch of their next round of OS & Office software. Google had better spend a little more time focussing on relevancy.
     
    Old Welsh Guy, Aug 23, 2005 IP
  11. nevetS

    nevetS Evolving Dragon

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    #11
    That's how google got big in the first place - less crap than the other SE's and when they included adwords, they were not hugely annoying. We'll see what happens, but getting too greedy opens the door for other SE's.
     
    nevetS, Aug 23, 2005 IP