Search
Engine Marketing Increasingly Profitable
Alexis Muellner
Back
stage on the Internet, there are spiders
and sniffers, bridges and cloaking
devices, doorways and redirects.
It's
not a Tolkien trilogy trailer, but a
look into the lucrative world of search
engine marketing.
In
South Florida, several firms with
expertise and track records are feasting
on a wide-open marketplace for expertise
in navigating the ever-shifting
landscape of search engine criteria and
preference.
Search
engine marketing is a niche dominated by
few, and strewn with small businesses
and basement consultants – all looking
to make Web site-owning clients scream
loud enough to be heard in cyberspace.
Heightened
demandMore than eight in 10 computer
users have gone to search engines to
find information on the Web, according
to new data from the Pew Internet and
American Life project in Washington,
D.C. The research also finds one in four
Americans search engines on any given
day.
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Those
numbers spell value for vendors who can
benefit from positioning on search
engines.
And
there are vendors large and small.
"Now,
more than ever, people need business and
more traffic," said Peter Stein,
CEO of WebGenius in Miami. "It just
goes to prove the Web is alive and well
and better than ever, even though the
economy has taken a beating on Wall
Street."
Demand
comes from the desire for targeted
leads.
In
Web-speak, "impressions" used
to matter. But now, it's all about
return on investment and creating real
sales.
"Banner
ads are dead," Stein said.
"They are now clicked through less
than a quarter of 1 percent."
WebGenius
has 4,000 square feet of office space on
Biscayne Boulevard in north Miami-Dade
County and employs 60, double the staff
it had last summer.
Stein
won't disclose revenue, but said it grew
102 percent last year for the business
he funded with $600,000.
The
business began in 1998 as a portal for
plastic surgeons. Doctors on the site
ranked high in search engines and Stein
realized his services were marketable.
"We
have 53 programmers that do nothing but
know the ever changing algorithms of the
search engines," he said.
WebGenius'
main competitors are Los Angeles-based
24/7 Website Results and
MoreVisibility.com in Boca Raton.
That
firm has 2,500 square feet of office
along South Dixie Highway in the shadow
of the local WorldCom headquarters.
MoreVisibility.com
employs 15 and is expanding its space
and staff by about 20 percent. It is run
by President Andy Wetzler, a former
Baltimore-based telemarketing and call
center consultant, and Chairman/CEO
Dennis Pushkin, former president of U.S.
operations for Dryclean USA.
MoreVisibility
separates itself from competitors
through a detailed online marketing
analysis that goes beyond submitting key
words to search engines and focuses on
placement and tracking services.
Changes
in the business are leading to business
for firms such as MoreVisibility.com. It
used to be that big companies took
search engine marketing to their
information technology departments,
Pushkin said.
"Those
IT departments once needed to justify
their existence but time has
evolved," he said. "In-house,
they haven't been so successful and
that's bringing clients."
Its
client base is made up of some big
names, including Lucent Technologies,
RealNetworks, Car & Driver magazine,
Nova Southeastern University, L.L.Bean,
Grant Thornton and Toyota.
"As
we started to bring in clients, our goal
was 50 and then 100," Pushkin said.
"That was revised to 200 and then
300 and now it's beyond 350."
Pushkin
declined to offer revenues for the
privately held, self-financed firm but
said May was a record month for revenue,
which reached "the mid-six
figures." The company has been
profitable since it began, he said.
Most
of the firm's contracts last 12 months
but there is the occasional
"odd-ball gig," like a recent
15-month contract for Toyota, which
wanted help promoting its new Matrix
model through key words online and paid
listings.
A
local newcomer is Philadelphia-based
Unreal Marketing, which entered the
market last month after acquiring Taylor
Traffic, a marketing firm with 19
clients.
It
took 1,100 square feet in an office on
Sunrise Boulevard in east Fort
Lauderdale to house a four-person sales
team.
Unreal
billed $1 million last year, numbers the
firm expects to jump to $3 million this
year, said Michael Stalbaum, CEO and
general counsel.
The
firm employs 18 and, like MoreVisibility,
is privately funded. Clients include
Kaplan Colleges and the Howard Stern Ad
Network.
"A
real benefit of ours is tracking ROI
[return on investment], and we track
what's going on," Stalbaum said.
"We can tell what keyword they came
with, which third-party partner
companies are involved."
It
used to be that anyone could track
traffic. Results were another question.
"Big
deal, I get 10,000 hits, but what did I
get for that?" Stalbaum said.
"Now we can say, you had 8,000 who
downloaded this, and 6,000 who actually
bought, and things like that."
Search
engine-friendly
Unreal
sells clients on time saved. Search
engine requirements are fickle and
fluid, and Unreal said it is experienced
in algorithms.
Each
search engine has its own criteria for
listing and its own economics, said
MoreVisibility's Wetzler.
The
demographics at Google, for example, are
skewed toward business professionals, he
said. That is intelligence his clients
want.
A
new relationship is dawning between the
marketers and the search engines
themselves.
"We
have beneficial relationships with the
search engines, we're tech heavy and we
have proprietary software we use to
build the pages."
WebGenius,
MoreVisibility.com and Unreal Marketing
all have strategic deals with search
engines in which they provide so-called
XML feeds to the sites.
XML
feeds summarize the content of a Web
page to the search engine in the form of
the most relevant keywords. It actually
goes in and looks at the page and
provides it to the engine on a friendly
format.
"Now
with our relationship with Inktomi.com,
we get them 10,000 pages a night,"
Stalbaum said.
"It's
always been a cat-and-mouse game with
the search engines, but now they embrace
us," WebGenius' Stein said.
The
company now sends direct feeds to
AltaVista and expects a similar
arrangement with Inktomi soon.
"We
have a volume of clients in the hundreds
and they are wanting to be a search
engine and not be in the business of
marketing," Stein said.
FTC
wants more search disclosure
The
phenomenon of "pay for
performance" sites has altered the
landscape.
The
Federal Trade Commission in June said it
would send letters outlining the need
for clear disclosure to companies that
offer Internet search services,
according to CNET News.com.
It
was responding to a complaint by
Portland, Ore.-based Commercial Alert.
The
FTC said it would not take formal action
now and noted that many of the sites
named in the original complaint were
already flagging paid listings.
Of
the 12 search sites owned or operated by
the seven search-engine companies named
in the complaint, 11 divide paid-ranking
results by placing them above nonpaid
results, the agency found.
"Some
people like it and others feel like
those who pay will get more exposure,
and that goes against the supposed
spirit of the Internet, which is free
navigation," said Joao Ribeiro,
owner of Option4 Interactive Solutions
in Miami.
The
pay sites may actually lend some
credibility to those paying. It shows an
investment into the site, Ribeiro said.
Option4
has seven employees and an office it
owns on Brickell Key in Miami. It does
Web page development, but ask Ribeiro
what's been hot lately, and he'll say a
Web business integration program.
"We
offer those service and have a
specialist," he said. "It's
going pretty fast now with two or three
requests a week, and that seems to
relate to problems with the economy as
people want to promote better."
At
Option4, it undertakes search engine
marketing in 30 to 60 day chunks.
"After
our optimizing work on their site, we
teach them how to keep using
pay-for-click and how to apply it and
keep promoting the Web site on their
own," Ribeiro said.
The
company charges $75 an hour and needs 15
to 20 hours to make some real progress.
"The
rules change fast about how and what
they accept and we're not trying to make
$2,000 and get out," Ribeiro said.
It
has worked for the past year with
http://www.clickseguros.com and http://www.global
insurance.com, which provides insurance
for non-U.S. residents.
"The
number of insurance plans sold on the
site went up 300 percent in a
year," he said.
Link2City.com
in south Miami-Dade offers Web design
and Web hosting, but its livelihood
these days is Web marketing.
Smaller
Web marketing firms less apt to have the
direct pathways into the search engines
need to focus on keeping track of what
the engines are doing, especially when
it comes to spiders.
This
is software they develop that goes
scampering around the Internet scouring
Web sites based on a range of criteria.
"They
do the job of what the Web site owners
used to do by submitting links,"
Link2City.com CEO Danny Sibai said.
"Making submissions doesn't really
work anymore."
Search
engines' focus was to build databases
with highly qualified sites.
"They
don't care about having any more Web
sites in their databases," Sibai
said.
Microsoft
Network has 125 spiders it sends out, he
said. Sometimes they are called sniffers.
"When
they come to your site, they look for
elements, key words, and graphics and
the way things link," he said.
It
is all based on algorithms – each of
the spiders in the same engine looks for
different things. The first step is
getting indexed. Once the spider visits,
the indexing begins.
"It
could be 1 of 10 million but you are
in," Sibai said.
Each
one of the spiders has a certain
schedule they go out with.
"If
this is what you do for a living – you
create a search engine that tracks down
the spiders – you learn how to get the
IP addresses, some by ethical means and
some underground," Sibai said.
"And each company has its own
technology and its own ways."
Link2City
charges $1,800 to optimize a site. Fees
could vary from $25 to $2,000. Its
biggest site is South Motors Group and
Vista BMW. It also works with North
Miami toymaker Safari Ltd.
"With
the IP addresses, you try to manipulate
and manage the spiders to come to your
Web site," he said.
Exactly
what the spider is supposed to do is the
search engine's secret.
"Each
one of those spiders looks for different
things," he said. "MSN changed
its algorithm three times in a week
recently."
What
Sibai stays away from is cloaking, an
unethical way of gaining ranking. Other
than spamming search engines, cloaking
is the quickest way to a permanent black
list. A page is created that is
invisible to all except for the spider.
"I
can design a porn Web site and it will
have the look and feel to the spiders of
a church," Sibai said. "So the
spider reads me as a church, come and
pray, and they give me a ranking, but
it's porn."
But
even cloaking has its place, said
WebGenius' Stein.
"We
wrote some of the first cloaking scripts
out there, but it's not a devil's
word," he said. "It can hide
an ugly doorway page if it's used
responsibly. Matches can start a forest
fire if used irresponsibly. Cloaking
could be used to do tricky things and
divert people from a search for ink jet
cartridges to Pamela Anderson
nude."
Businesses
spent more than $13 billion to promote
their Web businesses in 2000, according
to a report by ActivMedia Research,
which found business-to-business and
business-to-consumer sites will easily
outspend those in the
media/portal/information space.
"Where
are the people going on the Web?,"
asked Unreal Marketing's Stalbaum.
"The No. 1 answer is search
engines, and if you aren't in the first
three pages, forget it."
E-mail
Managing Editor Alexis Muellner at
amuellner@bizjournals.com.
©
2002 American City Business Journals
Inc.