| >> Webcasts | >> Case Studies | >> Best Practices |
| >> Newsletters | >> Blogs |
| >> Webcasts | >> Case Studies | >> Best Practices |
| >> Newsletters | >> Blogs |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Last week at Search Engine Strategies show in New York City, Yusuf Mehdi, the Search Boss at Bing, admitted that Microsoft neglected the long tail of search “We missed the boat early on that the focus was about the long tail,“. He went on to say “… it turned out the long tail was much more important.” This, of course, caused a ripple in the media and everyone weighed in with their own angle on this revelation.
For those of us, neck deep in the thicket of search engine marketing this did not come as a surprise. For the word on the street has always been that Google’s had (and still has) the biggest lead on indexing of the long tail keywords. Their gargantuan index has helped Google’s ranking algorithm to match the queries exactly to the desired content, much faster. It also helped small advertisers by providing them an an affordable way of generating leads through paid search in the face of stiff competition.

Surprisingly media did not give much attention to Google’s gaze into crystal ball to look at the future of search at SES San Jose. Nick Fox, Business Product Management Director from Google, let this loose in the Keynote address
Continue reading »