Why are the services listed here considered to be
the Major Search Engines? They are all either well known and well used.
Independent research shows
98% of traffic comes through the top 5 -15 search engines. More are now
using pay per clicks to fuel their results that we cover here.
For webmasters, these engines are the most important places to be listed,
because they can potentially generate so much traffic. Submitting to
hundreds
of search engines can be a waste of your resources if no Internet users
utilise them.
For searchers, these well known, commercially backed search engines
generally mean more dependable results. These search engines are more
likely to
be well maintained and upgraded when necessary, to keep pace with the
growing Internet.
Not all of the services below are "true" search engines that
crawl the web. For instance, Yahoo and the Open Directory both are "directories" that
depend on humans to compile their listings. In fact, most of the services
below offer both search engine and directory information, though
they will predominately feature one type of results over the other.
Google
Google is the No.1 search engine that makes heavy use of link
popularity as a primary way to rank web sites. This can be especially
helpful in finding good sites in response to general searches such
as "cars" and "holiday," because users across the
web have voted for good sites by linking to them. The system works
so well
that Google has gained widespread praise for its high relevancy. Google
also has a huge index of the web and provides some results to Yahoo
and
Netscape Search. We have seen Google rise phenomenally compared with
other engines, as they don't advertise to the same degree as others.
Who said "word
of mouth " works?
Yahoo
Yahoo was the web's most popular search service and has a well-deserved
reputation for helping people find information easily. Yahoo! was
founded
in 1994 by Stanford Ph.D. students, David Filo and Jerry Yang. Today,
Yahoo! Inc. is the Internet's leading global consumer and business
services
company, offering a comprehensive network of essential services for Web
users around the globe as well as businesses of all sizes. As the
first
online navigational guide to the Web, for many years classed as No. 1
it is the most recognized and valuable Internet brand globally, reaching
over 235 million unique users in 29 countries and 18 languages.
MSN Search
Microsoft's MSN Search service is a LookSmart-powered directory of web
sites, with secondary results that come from Inktomi. As all Microsoft
family products it is up there with the main players dominating the
market. Research for yourself: Go to an Internet cafe, college library
etc. See for yourself how people
search the
net.
87%
of all web users have IE 4.0 and above.
AOL Search
AOL Search allows its members to search across the web and AOL's own
content from one place. The main listings for categories and web sites
used to
come from the Open Directory (watch this space). Inktomi (see below)
also provides crawler-based results, as backup to the directory information.
Because of the amount of subscribers in USA and UK (roughly 9% of all
user's) it is imperative to list here. Primary results have become
Pay Per Click.
AltaVista
AltaVista is consistently one of the largest search engines on the web,
in terms of pages indexed. Its comprehensive coverage and wide range
of
power searching commands makes it a favourite among researchers. In addition
to crawler-based web page matches, it also offers news search, shopping
search, multimedia search and human-powered directory results from
LookSmart. AltaVista opened in December 1995. Recently acquired by
Overture.
Inktomi
Originally, there was an Inktomi search engine at UC Berkeley. The creators
then formed their own company with the same name and created a new Inktomi
index, which was first used to power HotBot. Now the Inktomi index also
powers several other services. All of them tap into the same index, though
results may be slightly different. This is because Inktomi provides ways
for its partners to use a common index yet distinguish themselves. There
is no way to query the Inktomi index directly, as it is only made available
through Inktomi's partners such as Ineedhits.com.
Ask Jeeves
Ask Jeeves is a human-powered search service that aims to direct you to
the exact page that answers your question. It is classed as a meta engine.
Now giving higher ranking to Pay Per Click.
Teoma
Teoma provides better results because it goes beyond traditional page
ranking methods to determine authority, in addition to relevancy.
To determine
the authority or quality of a site's content, Teoma uses Subject-Specific
PopularitySM. Adds listings to Ask Jeeves.
FAST Search
Fast Search & Transfer ASA (FAST) powers the "information-on-demand" economy
by enabling people to get the information they want, wherever and whenever
they want it. FAST offers a powerful platform of search
and
filter technologies, including the world's most comprehensive and freshest
search engine and high-capacity real-time filter engines. Norwegian
based
some say as good as Google, high praise indeed. Recently acquired by Overture.
IWon
Backed by US television network CBS, iWon has a directory of web sites
generated automatically by Inktomi, which also provides its more traditional
crawler-based results. It launched in autumn 1999. Now using Google results
as well
Open Directory
The Open Directory uses volunteer editors to catalogue the web. Formerly
known as NewHoo, it was launched in June 1998. It was acquired by
Netscape
in November 1998, and the company pledged that anyone would be able to
use information from the directory through an open license arrangement.
Netscape itself was the first licensee. Lycos, Google, Hotbot, Mamma
and AOL Search also make heavy use of Open Directory data. The place
to be
listed correctly as so many Major's depends on their results.
HotBot
HotBot is a favourite among researchers due to its many power-searching
features. In most cases, HotBot's first page of results comes from
the
Direct Hit service, and then secondary results come from the
Inktomi search engine, which is also used by other services. It gets
its directory information from the Open Directory project.
LookSmart
LookSmart is a human-compiled directory of web sites. Now Pay Per Click
to the delight of many customers. We are awaiting trials of the new service
to gauge their $300 dollar free clicks as a refund to current client's.
Lycos(now using AlltheWeb's index)
Netscape Search
Netscape Search's results come primarily from the Open Directory and
Netscape's own Smart Browsing database, which does an excellent job
of listing official
web sites. Primary results come from Google. Netscape browsers make
up less than 10% of Internet user's.
For the UK market YELL is an important directory as we have seen
it generate a good percentage of hits. This is The Yellow Pages online
directory, businesses that link their site appear at the top of the search
results randomly although you pay for the link.
You should also ensure that if you are in the UK you get listed on all
the major UK search facilities and portals. This is always done for our
clients. Contact us now to get complete coverage on all the main search
engines and directories that your potential customers are using now.........
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