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Does
This Look Smart?
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Recent Changes at Web Directory LookSmart May Have A Significant Effect on Searchers and Marketers Alike. LookSmart calls it an "upgrade". |
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you are an Internet marketer or a casual web user, search engines are likely
to be an integral part of the way you use the web. You've probably heard
of MSN and may even have heard of LookSmart
- it is similar to YAHOO! (You've probably
heard of them!) but without the well known brand name.
In order to get other search sites to use their directory, LookSmart pays other search sites like MSN to use the directory in their search results. (See the SEC Filing) When you search MSN, the prominently displayed "web directory" sites come from LookSmart. Whether you fall into the searcher or marketer category, a recent dramatic Price Hike of up to 2000%+ may affect you. Significantly.
If it was up to spec - and most anything was that came in with a credit card number- it would be listed in the directory, increase the diversity of search results at LookSmart and partner sites like MSN, and provide a source of viewers or customers for your website if it turned up high enough in the search results. You didn't always have to pay to get listed in LookSmart but over the years, gradually, they ratcheted up the fees to $299.00 per page. The devil is in the details. After years of paying a one-time fee to LookSmart for a review that virtually always resulted in a listing, most people assumed that nominal price increases would be the norm. Submit and forget so to speak. WRONG! On or about April 2, 2002, LookSmart took advantage of the small print in the LookSmart Terms of Service (that little box you checked when you submitted said you agreed to all kinds of things!). In essence, it explained that LookSmart guaranteed nothing but an editorial review. LookSmart could remove your site at any time for any reason, change the listing, and didn't have to inform you or get your consent for any of this. This legalese was recently used to demand what in some cases amounted to a per click fee that could end up being as much as 2000%+ more annually than the previous one-time fee for a listing - that's up to $6000+ dollars annually. If you didn't cough up the cash right quick, you probably just got removed from the directory. As part of the "upgrade", the notification on April 12, 2002 explained that listings in the directory prior to the "upgrade" would receive $300 in free clicks - 100 clicks for each of the next 20 months. Then, on April 29, 2002, another round of Emails were sent out. The deal changed once again. Those free clicks all of a sudden came with a catch. If the site owner did not start paying for clicks over and above the "free" monthly allotment within the next 3 months, the previous deal would end at 3-4 months As an advertiser you may expect to pay for exposure, and $6000.00+ per year might not seem to bad, right? It depends. Consider the following:
Objective search engine results that are not for sale are critical to the future of the web. They facilitate the sharing of knowledge and information and create a level playing field for businesses and content sites of all sizes and budgets. Search engine results that are paid advertising should be labeled as paid advertising. When using an Internet search engine, chose one that provides unbiased results such as Google, YAHOO!, Teoma, Fast (AllTheWeb.com) Gigablast, Lycos, The Open Directory, AOL, or Google. Other search sites such as Looksmart, and MSN which uses the LookSmart database, are showing you primarily (there informational sites in LookSmart that get syndicated to MSN which come from Zeal) the sites of advertisers with deep pockets that buy their way into the search results and are listed in the "web directory sites" section. If you want free exposure for your website, submit to ODP, YAHOO!, AllTheWeb.com, Teoma, or Google. If you feel that your recent account "upgrade?!?!?!?" is not quite what you bargained for, you may want to write to LookSmart, Email them, post your thoughts online, or vote with your advertisng dollars and use Overture or Google AdWords instead. If you want to search a shrinking database of sites that contains multiple pages of deep pocketed advertisers, LookSmart and its partners may prove to be useful.
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For
more information on the recent changes discussed above you may want to
review the following forums and articles.
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Related Articles Looks Can Be Deceiving by Kelena Jordan, CEO Web Rank Lt. LookSmart Looks Dumb Again by Jill Whalen LookSmart Forums Directory Forums at WebMasterWorld Pay Per Click Advertising Engines Forum at WebMasterWorld LookSmart Forums at SearchEngineForums LookSmart Forums at ihelpyou services The Parody Site actdumb.com a collection of links to various forums and articles about Looksmart |