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Old 09-08-2005, 10:53 AM
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Default Ask Jeeves: It’s Not Easy Being Me

The future of Ask Jeeves is still largely up in the air. Though it trails quite far behind its major competitors, the arguably 4th most popular search engine is actively paving its own road through technology, advertising, and widescale integration of complementary services, making it a major player in search, more potential than kinetic at this point, and different.

In an interview with vnunet.com, Ask CEO Steve Berkowitz, shed some light on the future of his company and the niche they’re trying carve out.

In mid-July, Ask found itself in the arms of Interactive Corp, adding the search engine to a family that includes Evite, Match.com, Ticketmaster and Citysearch, and Berkowitz has every intention of utilizing the new resources to bolster Ask’s search experience. Within the year, says Berkowitz, we’ll see an integration of content across the board.

That integration seems to be a ticket to paring down sponsored search results at Ask Jeeves, allowing the search engine to be more pureform.

“We’re always showing three links above the fold. That means that when you come to Ask.com and you type in a query, the maximum number of commercial links that you’re going to see is three,” said Berkowitz.

Of course, once a more ubiquitous Ask Jeeves is around, those three comercial links will become prime real estate, especially as Berkowitz and company focus more on Europe and less in the United States. 2006 will see a major launch in Spain, Germany, France, and the UK.

“I think that’s [Europe] where we can gain a lot of market share all the time because in those markets Google is even more dominant than in the US and people are looking for choice,” predicted the CEO.

Upping their search market share from 6.1% won’t come overnight, however. As MyJeeves personalized search integrates with the rest of the corporate strategy, the company will have to build trust among consumers, and that takes time—and real world marketing.

“We’re just slowly but surely starting to move back into the world of real marketing. We had a great first half of the year in terms of the response for our marketing, so you’ll see us do more of that in the fall, and more of that down in 2006.”

Whatever happens, we’re sure to see a very different search engine with a different approach than Google and Yahoo!. Rather than, like the top three contenders who consistently cannibalize each other, Ask Jeeves is forging its path to becoming an interesting alternative.
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Old 09-15-2005, 05:54 AM
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Sometimes I do something controversial. Sometimes it is not everybodies 'cup of tea' but this thread on Vnunet is just part of something I have been working on for some time now. Jeeves gets around 5% of the General SE search business. With the forthcoming ORION Launch from the land of OZ. The SE's are going to change their MO. Searches will become totally different. Did many of you know that Google is paying students huge sums collectively to research 'Search Terms' to actual search results. To single out Search references and which SE lists that term and in which order. Did you know that certain SE's are 'watching forum postings'tracking the replies, tracking the sites, tracking the posters. Some forums are now paying posters to 'Post'? And that the SE's are actually making direct contact with these posters. Well I am speaking from personal experience, I've even had phone calls. One came in yesterday. So if anyone has been wondering what I've been up to 'my research was completed yesterday'! Watch this space, the SE wars are on.
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Old 10-17-2005, 01:10 PM
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Default How popular is ask Geeves?

I know the most popular search engines are Google, Yahoo and MSN. Is Ask Geeves the next most popular?

http://covington-louisiana.inside-real-estate.com/
http://Blue-Springs.inside-real-estate.com/
http://Corpus-Christi.inside-real-estate.com/
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Old 10-17-2005, 04:47 PM
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Default sometimes

AskJeeves and AOL tend to wrestle for 4th place, sometimes 6th. But one of those is consistently 4th.
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Old 10-17-2005, 07:01 PM
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Default Re: sometimes

Quote:
Originally Posted by ctabuk
........Jeeves gets around 5% of the General SE search business.....
Quote:
Originally Posted by jmiller
AskJeeves and AOL tend to wrestle for 4th place, sometimes 6th. But one of those is consistently 4th.
Where did you find this?

Is anyone aware of a site that tracks or estimates search engine usage by volume of searches?

What I mean is out of every 100 searches how many are done at:
Google
Yahoo
MSN
Ask Jeeves
AOL
And so on…
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Old 10-18-2005, 04:51 PM
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Default just one of the metrics

here's a nielsen/netratings report report from Danny Sullivan (faster than finding the original, actually)

http://searchenginewatch.com/reports...le.php/2156451

But the search positions (as usual) depend on who you ask, comScore's metrics are often slightly different, as are others that measure these things.
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Old 10-19-2005, 08:50 AM
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Hey jmiller,

That is exactly the information I have been seeking.

Thank you.
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Old 10-20-2005, 12:12 PM
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Default Re: just one of the metrics

Quote:
Originally Posted by jmiller
here's a nielsen/netratings report report from Danny Sullivan (faster than finding the original, actually)

http://searchenginewatch.com/reports...le.php/2156451

But the search positions (as usual) depend on who you ask, comScore's metrics are often slightly different, as are others that measure these things.
Awesome link! Thank you so much as well!

I was under the impression that msn had more search engine market share than it actually does have - very interesting...

I can deal with "google dances" and search engine index updates as long as they come in moderation. I just find it scary though that so many webmaster's livelihoods depend on search engine traffic, and they are always at the mercy of what these search engine choose to do.

I guess this just further stresses the idea of not putting all of one's eggs in one basket - diversity seems key. Directory listings, ppc, offline advertising methods, etc. seem more important than ever.
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