Internet
Potpourri
James T. Berger, Managing Editor
January 2007
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Following are some Internet-oriented news items as
gathered by the editors of The Wiglaf Journal…
How Internet Benefits Local Businesses
Even if your business is locally-oriented, search
engine optimization (SEO) should be a major concern, according to
Patricia Hursh, writing in the ClickZ electronic newsletter.
She reports that Internet users increasingly rely
on search engines to find local businesses citing as recent Nielsen/NetRatings
study that indicates that an almost incredible 70 percent of respondents
uses the Internet to search for a local service business. “More
and more people are going to find local information instead of opening
the big yellow book or turning to newspaper classifieds,”
Hursh writes.
“Furthermore,” she adds, “a revised
estimate by comScore indicates that local intent is behind up to
40 percent of all online queries, even if the searcher doesn’t
explicitly indicate location. Some of the most popular local queries
include searches related to real estate, car sales, restaurants,
hotels, attorneys and other service providers.”
The implications of this data are enormous to Web
marketers. Make sure when someone visits your site they immediately
see you addresses (e-mail and street) and phone and FAX numbers.
Don’t make them search too hard, they’ll go elsewhere.
Job Seekers Relying More on the Internet
The Internet has edged ahead of newspapers as the
preferred source for finding a job, according to report published
by The Conference Board.
In probing how job seekers look for a job, the Conference
Board shows the Internet and newspaper advertising are neck-and-neck.
In researching a data base that includes persons who reported searching
for a job between Jan. 1 and Sept. 30, 2006, 71.1 percent used the
Internet and 70.6 percent used newspaper advertising. This compares
with 49.2 percent who used networking and 26.5 percent who cited
“other” including employment agencies. The data is not
mutually exclusive, according to The Conference Board, in that many
job seekers use both newspapers and the Internet.
In another basis for comparison, The Conference Board
reported that among respondents who received a job offer, the largest
percentage (38.2 percent) feels that their offer resulted from their
Internet search. This compares to 23.9 percent for newspapers, 27.1
percent for networking and 29.9 percent for “other.”
Clearly, those companies looking to hire, should add
the Internet to its employee search options.
A Feast for Historians
Google’s new “News Archives” allows
history buffs to search through 200 years of historical content,
including many articles not previously available via search engines.
Google’s Anarag Acharya who played a major role
in compiling the new products explains “the goal of this service
is to allow people to search and explore how history unfolded.”
In putting together News Archives, Google partnered
with, among others, Time, The Wall Street Journal, The New York
Times, The Guardian and Washington Post. Google also partnered with
aggregators such as Factiva, Lexis-Nexis, Thomson Gale and HighBeam
Research.
Archived news can be found three ways, according to
ClickZ Executive Editor Chris Sherman. “You can search the
news archives directly through a new News Archive Search page. You
can also find news archive results when you search on Google News
or conduct a general Google Web search for a query with relevant
historical news results.”
There are both free and fee components to this new
service. Search results that require a fee are labeled “pay
for view” or list a specific price. Google doesn’t host
this content. By clicking on to the link, the visitor is transferred
to the content owner’s Web site where the transaction is completed
before access to the document(s) can be obtained.
Early Holiday Internet Shopping Rises in ‘06
A significant increase in spending per Internet visit
for the 2006 holiday season was reported by comScore Networks in
a Clickz article. For the first 31 shopping days Nov. 1 through
Dec.1, comScore reported spending to be 11 percent per visit ahead
of 2005.
As for total spending in the first 31 days of the
shopping season, comScore reported a 24 percent increase over 2005
— $11.75 billion vs. $9.45 billion.
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