Search Engine Marketing at PubConference IV Boston
WebmasterWorlds Search Engine Marketing Conference
By Stephen Turcotte, June 12th 2003
Backbone
Media attended the fourth annual WebmasterWorld
Search Engine Marketing PubConference at the Wyndham Tremont Hotel
in Boston, Massachusetts on Saturday April 26, 2003. The conference
is based on the WebmasterWorld discussion forum. The forum is dedicated
to exploring the issues faced by professional webmasters and practitioners
of search engine marketing.
The PubConference tradition started when a poster on WebmasterWorld
wrote that he was going to London and asked if anybody would like to
join him and talk shop. In a few days many others decided to skip the
pond and the PubConference tradition was born.
Pub
Conference IV drew white-hat, black-hat and gray-hat marketers as well
as top sponsors and speakers from the major search engines - Google,
Fast, Overture,
and Ask Jeeves / Teoma.
In addition to the informative presentations given, a highlight of this
search engine marketing conference was the dynamic jabbing between speakers
on whose search engine was the best.
The first presenter, Dan Boberg from Overture, spoke about
maximizing revenue and provided a very cogent strategy for identifying
and segmenting customers by nuances in their search phrases. For example,
a hypothetical searcher in the 'browsing' stage of the buying cycle
might use a phrase like "tv" where as a searcher in a more
advanced 'buying' stage may use more specific language like "Sony
Trinitron TV" and include model details. All the presenters spoke
confidently that their search engines were the best, and that their
engines provided most relevant results.
An official count was not given but there were easily
over 200 people at the conference, including many attendees from Europe.
Many of those attendees arrived earlier in the week and met for serious
search engine marketing discussions the night before the conference.
The soggy day's events started with a full breakfast, Extra Strength
Tylenol and then it was underway with the day's presentations.
The conference is unique for its laid back atmosphere
and opportunity for webmasters and search engine marketing professionals
to gather with search engine professionals in an informal atmosphere
for serious discussion and later over drinks in a pub setting.
Many
questions from the audience were directed at the presenters ranging
from privacy issues, new features in the works at search engines, strategies
for users to improve their page rank, how page rank works, and many
others.
Page rank was a popular subject as many search marketers
try to master it (page rank is the value that Google gives to a site
in its index) - some of the page rank questions included selling and
buying links to improve one's page rank. Most of these PR questions
were directed at Matt Cutts, a software engineer from Google.
If there was any doubt the conference was an indication
of how popular and valuable Google is to search engine marketing professionals.
After the presentations and the question and answer period was over,
the rock star from Google was overwhelmed by people bidding for some
quality time. I supposed they were seeking honor graphs and asking specific
questions about Google's secret inner workings. I'm sure he did his
best to sign and answer without giving up the sauce. In fact he almost
didn't get the chance to eat. While Cutts was blogged down with fans,
the rest of us search engine marketers gobbled down fine cuts of roast
beef accompanied by a tasty horseradish sauce (sorry no pictures of
the feast). I had no need to personally queue for a one-on-one with
Cutts because the secret of Google was right there before all of us.
I understood that the Blogger
tee shirt that Cutts wore was a sublime code to all the savvy search
engine marketers in the room -- hey if you really want to get your
site a top position in Google, blogger is the holy grail. I'm only
half kidding about the Blogger revelation, but that is a whole other
article.
All
kidding aside for a second, the panelists offered many helpful tips
and there was an atmosphere of fair treatment - that everyone was on
equal footing with the search engines. I particularly enjoyed chatting
with some of search engine marketing's hall-of-famers. Well, there is
no hall of fame for search engine marketing yet, but I'm sure that these
fine folks will be in it if there ever is one.
After the public Q&A, we talked with Greg Boser from
WebGuerilla
(that's him with the glasses - what a sport), one of the WebmasterWorld
moderators for the very popular Google News forum. We also sat with
Paul Gardi, of Ask Jeeves
/ Teoma and managed
to pry the story of how he broke his arm single handedly close-lining
a vandal on the streets of New York City.
And then it was off to the Top Secret Pub Location - Elephant
Castle Pub on Devonshire street in Boston. There we also got to chat
with Barbara Coll, a.k.a. Webmama.com,
and Jill Whalen from HighRankings.com.
Barbara (who's one of my favorite search engine marketing speakers)
reminded me why I came to the conference in the first place and referred
to the Piper Jaffray white paper on the
search market that was highlighted in the SEMPO
discussion forum called The Golden
Search. Jill Whalen is another search engine marketing expert that
is always full of great insights about SEM but what I remember most
about our chat is the Green Apple Martini. The drinks flowed as the
discussions of search marketing went on into the night.
The next PubConference is planned for 2004 in London.
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