The Future of Search & Search Engines!

An article
that describes whats the future of the search engines.
December, 2004.
The past year saw immense growth in the search sector. Search is
bigger today than it was twelve months ago in every respect. With
the Internet becoming a larger part of people's lives and broadband
access becoming the norm around the world, 2004 was the year that
big business fully recognized the full impact of search.
The search sector drives web-traffic by providing each web user with
the dynamic road maps and signposts that make the web usable. This
fact has finally become staggeringly obvious to anyone with an interest
in the web. That these road maps are self-generating and are increasingly
influenced by the interests of the individual user makes search the
most powerful medium in the world. The largest of the search firms
have found a stable business model in paid contextually delivered
advertising that promotes growth while providing unequaled opportunities
for advertisers.
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Sensing the enormous potentials, investors piled money into a sector
that was super-heated by interest surrounding Google's IPO. Eighteen
months of mega-money funding set the stage for the influx of innovative
features and tools each of the major players introduced recently.
The presence of so much money has also sparked grass roots innovation
seeing an increasing number of formal start-ups and home-baked software
design enthusiasts produce an array of search related tools and products.
Today, nearly every digital product can be searched in one way or
another. Among the greatest developments of the year was the expansion
of search engine databases to include a variety of file formats previously
inaccessible to search engine spiders.
Investment in the growth of the search industry coincides with vast
improvements in US home Internet access options that until recently
acted as a long-term construction-zone on the information super-highway.
Broadband access in the US has crossed the 50% mark. The introduction
of affordable high-speed access for US consumers is one of the most
important milestones in the development of the Internet. According
to Nielsen/Net ratings, as of October, 53% of US home Internet users
have broadband access. While the general behaviors of American Internet
users have not yet changed, the increasing number of high-speed users
allows the delivery of a wider array of information directly to home
users. From interactive appliances to the replacement of traditional
print media to altering social interaction, broadband access changes
the way people do things. Now that the majority of American Internet
users have high-speed home access, the Internet can start to meet
much more of its actual potential.
For most of the western world, high-speed home access has been a
reality for several years. Legal bickering amongst the American cable
and telephone cabals had delayed introduction of affordable services
to most US consumers until this year. Now that the most obvious digital
divide between the US and the rest of the wired world has been bridged,
software and entertainment producers can begin to exploit personal
digital distribution of their products. The adoption of high-speed
access by US home users will have a major, positive impact on the
business of search as US users will almost certainly imitate the actions
of users in other areas that have had broadband access for years.
The difference is measured in time. Whenever it is easier or faster
to find information on the Internet than it is to make a phone call
or send a fax, broadband users will always tend towards using the
Net. For most US home Internet users, it could take between 45 –
90 seconds to connect to the net using dial-up. With broadband, the
connection between the Internet and the home computer is never severed.
Assuming most businesses have useful websites, finding detailed information
about a local business or event is almost always faster online than
on the phone. Printed telephone directories will be used less, as
will telephones in general.
Regardless of where the web is going and the role the search sector
is going to play in it, most individuals and businesses rely on the
free, organic listings. Those listings will remain an important focus
for the search engines as they will continue to provide the primary
interactive point between home-user and the search engines. The impact
of organic placements will obviously be enhanced by the growth of
the search sector however once the user follows a link from the organic
SERPs, they will likely encounter a great deal of paid-advertising,
everywhere else they go. Repetition is the key to memory and competitive
advertisers should note the seemingly unlimited power of paid-contextual
advertising, especially for Google's AdWords program. When users don't
encounter AdWords, they almost certainly encounter advertising from
Overture, AskJeeves, FindWhat/Espotting, and others as they all have
their plans for 2005.
2005 is going to be an extremely intense year. If things are quiet
and peaceful in your universe over the next few weeks (and here's
to hoping it is), take a break and read as much as you possibly can.
If you have the time to explore, mess around with the new tools and
features. Take some professional development time to learn a bit about
XML, RSS, FLASH and PHP. Ask your family and friends about their search
habits. You may be surprised at the new sophistication that is shaping
up. The future, at least as the search sector is concerned is going
to be very friendly and increasingly informative. Now that the web
is going to become faster for its largest population, it is also going
to be increasingly interesting.
Article by:
Jim Hedger,
News Editor - StepForth
Search Engine Placement Inc.
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