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> Get Articles > Search Engines and SEO > Meet the Search Engines, Search Engine Strategies 2001 Conference, August 16-17, 2001, San Francisco
Meet the Search Engines, Search Engine Strategies 2001 Conference, August 16-17, 2001, San Francisco
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Robin Nobles
RobinNacws.com
Academy of Web Specialists
http://www.academywebspecialists.com/more_info
Meet the Search Engines!
Search Engine Strategies 2001 Conference
August 16-17, San Francisco
Notes by Robin Nobles
One of the most popular sessions at each of the Search Engine
Strategies Conferences is Meet the Search Engines, and this year
was no exception.
After all, where else can you hear representatives from four
different search engines give information about their engines as
well as answer questions from the audience?
In this particular session, the engines were represented by:
* Rob Rubin, Executive Vice President of Internet Services with
FAST
* Tim Mayer, Web Search Product Manager with Inktomi
* Chris Kermoian, Director of Internet Search Services and Web
Marketing with AltaVista
* Daniel Dulitz, Software Engineer with Google
Now, let's move to announcements by each of the major engines.
FAST
Rob Rubin with FAST began by outlining some facts about their
engine:
* In May of 1999, FAST launched the world's largest search
engine, All the Web, with 50 million documents.
* In November 1999, they launched multimedia search.
* In December 1999, they launched mobile search.
* FAST has a 9-12 day cycle for crawling the Web, but they don't
crawl the entire Web during each cycle.
* FAST uses a proprietary relevancy algorithm coupled with link
and query analysis. With FAST, link analysis is very important
when determining relevancy, as is placement of text on the page
and the use of keywords in headers, etc.
* FAST currently has 625 million Web pages in its index and is
getting as much coverage of the Web as it can, including English
sites and 46 other language documents.
Rubin discussed FAST's PartnerSite service, which is a pay-for-
inclusion service that's currently being offered through a beta
program. Highlights of the PartnerSite service include:
* Guaranteed inclusion in FAST's index;
* Dedicated index of the site's pages hosted in FAST's data
center;
* Guaranteed 24-hour site reindexing;
* Customized site search results pages;
* Controlled site crawling;
* Advanced logging, reporting, and keyword tracking tools;
* Language support and detection (46 languages).
For more information about FAST's PartnerSite, visit:
http://www.fast.no/index.php?d=products&c=internet&s=partnersite
Interesting Note: Rubin mentioned that AlltheWeb.com is FAST's
testing domain. At this domain, they were the first to integrate
HTML, multimedia, MP3, and FTP search results. Advanced
algorithms are set up at the site to detect spam, deep links, and
offensive content as well as automated search tips.
Inktomi
Moving on to Inktomi, Tim Mayer discussed the engine's top
priority: relevance. Other priorities include high quality
content, better breadth of content (results for every query), and
making their portal partners successful. Inktomi reaches 82
percent of the U.S. Internet users.
Mayer outlined Inktomi's separate databases:
* Best of the Web: full refresh every 9 days; contains over 110
million documents.
* EuroCluster: full refresh every 21 days; contains 100 million
documents.
* APAC: full refresh every 21 days; contains 65 million
documents.
* Gigadoc: full refresh every 30 days; contains more than 500
million documents.
Inktomi now offers two pay inclusion programs. Search/Submit is
ideal for sites with less than 1000 pages. It offers a 48-hour
refresh and is available through Position Technology, VeriSign,
ineedhits.com, and Outrider. For more information, visit:
http://www.inktomi.com/products/search/pagesubmission.html
Index Connect is for large content providers, and it offers a 48-
hour refresh as well, based on customer needs. This service is
available through e-Luminator, Position Technology, e-centives,
Inceptor, and Traffic Leader. For more information, visit:
http://www.inktomi.com/products/search/connect.html
How does Inktomi define spam? "Trying to trick the search engine
into offering inappropriate search results for particular
queries," explained Mayer. Examples include:
* Cloaking - if used to feed Inktomi crawlers content that is not
relevant to the actual pages
* Link farms
Spammers can be reported to a new e-mail address:
spamcrusaderinktomi.com.
AltaVista
AltaVista's rep, Chris Kermoian, relayed the engine's view on
ranking: "If you have the most useful and most popular site on a
particular topic, AltaVista will do its best to make sure your
site is #1." AltaVista receives 200 million unique queries every
month.
Key elements of ranking in AltaVista are:
* Content that is useful and unique.
* Placement of content on the page. Use "newspaper" style
placement. Text at the top of the page is generally assigned
greater weight than text at the bottom of the page.
* Title tags. The page title is critical.
* Keyword and description META tags.
* Link popularity, with links coming from valuable sites.
Artificial links are considered spam. Anchor text should
accurately describe the page's content.
How can you get into AV's index?
* Regular spider run by AV's crawler.
* Basic free submit takes 4-6 weeks, of which 90 percent of these
submissions are considered spam. Tip: In AV's submission
"puzzle," using the letter "O" or the zero "0" will both work, if
you can't tell which they're asking for. Same thing with the
number "1" and the lower-case L "l."
* Express inclusion is ideal for small and mid-sized sites with
under 500 pages. Weekly updates for six months are included.
Ranking of pages are updated each week, so changes made to pages
are quickly seen in the search results. For more information,
visit: http://www.altavista.com/sites/search/express_incl
* Trusted Feed is a new program especially for large sites where
Web pages are provided to AV in XML feed format. This service
offers detailed online reporting capabilities. All pages
submitted through Trusted Feed are monitored for spam. This
program solves many issues such as dynamic content and framed
pages. For more information, visit:
http://www.altavista.com/sites/search/trustedfeed
Does AltaVista assign more relevancy to pages that have been in
their index for a while? According to Kermoian, no. He also
stated that participating in their inclusion programs doesn't
have a special effect on rankings either.
Google
Daniel Dulitz with Google said that Google's mission is to
organize all the information they can find and make it useful to
everyone.
Facts about Google:
* Google boosts 1.3 billion Web pages now, making it the world's
largest search engine.
* Google offers 60 interface languages.
* Google crawls the Web every 28 days, but it takes a little
additional time for pages to appear in the index. It crawls some
sites more often.
* Google offers PDF searches, an image search in beta, and
searches by date.
Interesting Note: Google crawls pages on the Web in order of
importance.
Dulitz said that Google has no pay inclusion program and doesn't
plan on offering one, which was met with a round of applause from
attendees.
What's important to Google?
* The most important thing to Google is great content.
* Use user-friendly navigation.
* Make sure that the site shows up in all browsers.
* Work hard on building your link popularity. Get links from
well-respected sites, which is the "peer review" aspect of the
Web. Links should be visible and described accurately in an
effort to get people to click on them.
If you want to appear at the top of the results in Google, Dulitz
recommends advertising with AdWords.
Why are sites dropped from Google?
* If a page is unreachable when Google's spider tries to crawl
it, it will get dropped.
* Also, sites can get banned because of "serious" offenses,
either detected manually or automatically.
Dynamic Content
One of the participants asked which of the engines index dynamic
content.
* Google will index dynamic content and will crawl pages with
question marks or cgi references.
* Inktomi will index dynamic content but only a few pages from
each site. You can form a partnership with Inktomi and they will
index more pages.
* Fast doesn't crawl dynamic pages with question marks or large
databases behind them.
* AltaVista can index dynamic content and can handle question
marks. You can submit through their Basic Submit for free or
through Express Inclusion. However, if your content changes
frequently, they don't want to index those pages because by the
time the pages make it into the index, the content has changed.
Automated Queries
How do the engines feel about automated queries?
* Google's Terms of Service
(http://www.google.com/terms_of_service.html) states, "You may
not send automated queries of any sort to Google's system without
express permission in advance from Google. Note that `automated
queries' includes using any software which sends queries to
Google to determine how a website `ranks' on Google for various
queries."
* AltaVista doesn't encourage the use of automated queries for
checking positions and have stopped huge infractions. On a small
scale, however, they haven't taken an active position to stop
them.
Attend the next conference and meet the search engines yourself!
Mark your calendars now! The next Search Engine Strategies
Conference (http://www.academywebspecialists.com/sew) will be
held in Dallas on November 14, 2001, and from there, it will
move to Boston on March 4-5, 2002. Hope to see you there!
This article was written by Robin Nobles, a professional
freelance writer and the Director of Training of the Academy of
Web Specialists. Over the past few years, she has trained several
thousand people in her online and onsite courses in search engine
positioning strategies and has written three books that can be
ordered through Amazon. Visit the Academy's Web site to learn
more about their online courses and products:
http://www.academywebspecialists.com/more_info .
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