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Thursday, August 26, 2004

Smart search - Advanced search engines link many data sources

Smart search

By Joab Jackson
GCN Staff

Advanced search engines link many data sources

A commercial search engine ties together multiple pharmaceutical databases for the Food and Drug Administration’s Drug Evaluation and Research Center.

A different search engine is helping the Nuclear Regulatory Commission level the mounds of paperwork for upcoming hearings on radioactive waste disposal at Yucca Mountain, Nev. At both agencies, the search engines must interface with widely varying formats and repositories.

FDA and NRC decided to give their employees and others access through a browser interface, rather than building data warehouses to aggregate the volumes of information.

“The nice thing is that we don’t have to store it all,” said Helen Mitchell, enterprise search product manager at the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, which built a search gateway to 15 data repositories. “All we have to do is point to and index it.”

With so many government repositories available, employees often squander time doing the same searches with different search engines, said Dave Connor, federal vice president for search engine provider Convera Corp. of Vienna, Va.




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Unfit for Command

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Monday, August 23, 2004

Unfit for Command

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Unfit for Command

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Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry

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East Valley Living - Your GUIDE to the East Valley of Phoenix Arizona - Free Business directory, Bar Guide, Restaurant directory and news.

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Sunday, August 22, 2004

What’s the cheapest, most productive place to spend marketing dollars today?

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What"s the cheapest, most productive place to spend marketing dollars today?
An article to explain Internet marketing for business owners. Tips for getting your site to the top of the search enginesSEO, or search engine optimization. Link to free ranking report.

(PRWEB) August 19, 2004 -- A friend sat me down recently and asked me to explain what Internet marketing is. In one respect, it"s marketing your site by getting exposure, but in another respect, it means using the Internet to help people find the sitewhat we call search engine optimization. I told her about improving the search results for her site, about how the search engines work, and how page content was probably what needed to be fixed. She was nodding all along, but then she asked SBut why spend money on the Web site when what I really need to do is increase my sales?⬝

This was one of those EUREKA! moments. SYou need more prospects to get more sales.⬝ Suddenly, I realized that she really didn't understand how the Internet works, or that she could literally drive prospects to her site. She simply didn't know that this practical, common sense approachInternet marketingis the most productive marketing investment she could make, for the least amount of money, with the fastest return on the investment. And if one smart business owner with a Web site didn"t realize how the Internet landscape has changed over the past two years, there must be thousands moremaybe you"re one of them.

By tapping into the power of search engines with a freshly optimized site, you use the Internet to deliver prospective customerswho are actively looking for a solutionright to your door, and can do so without ANY incremental cost. You can also advertise on the search engines, paying only for people who actually visit your site. It"s an exciting time.

Even a small business can be the #1 result when people search for your solutionand today, 85% of people with Internet access find new products or services by searching the web (even for well-established brands!). Here's another interesting (or scary) fact: if your site isn't in the top 20 listings, 56% of people won't find you...they just don't look any further. On the positive side, visits from top rankings are up to 4 times more likely to convert into customers.

Making it to the top

So, getting to the top of the search engine results list is important. On the other hand, there are over 6 billion web pages. What do you do to get your pages to the top?

The key to optimization is to realize that the search engines index pages, not sites. Any of your top-level pages can be an entry page. To optimize a site, we concentrate on the page content, making sure that important search terms are there for the search engines to index; for example, SInternet marketing.⬝ We optimize the home page for the two or three most relevant, most used terms, realizing that other pages can be optimized for other terms, e.g. SInternet marketing agency,⬝ or Sweb marketing.⬝

The basic premise of search engine optimization is that almost every Web site needs tweaking to improve the productivity of the site. Most Web sites are built as a special project by a design team, then maintained by technical people. Marketing of the Web site, either by refining content to match prospect interests or by utilizing other promotional tools, simply doesn't happen, so there's nowhere near the traffic there should be.

The ABCs of SEO

There is a four-step process to search engine optimization (SEO), understanding that search engines look at meta tags in the HTML document, page content, internal link structure and external link popularity to determine your ranking in the results.
1. Brainstorm, research and analyze the key words a purpose was met, to provide information, but as a result, the Web site is like a flyer that is skimmed once and then thrown away.

All the money spent on attracting interest from prospects is wasted if the interest isn’t reciprocated. Reaching far beyond a brochure, the Web provides a rich media environment and two-way data-driven communication. This should drive a Web site with an “outside:in” approach, one that is wrapped around the wants and needs of the prospect. Your web site is the most valuable real estate you own. The web provides a single point of access between you and your market—it can offer 360-degree visual tours, spoken testimonials, brochures on demand, discount coupons, references—at the same time it can gather information and deliver follow-up.

Especially on the web, successful marketers anticipate the needs of the prospect, and they work constantly to understand “the mind of the market.” Search engine optimization helps your site focus on attracting prospects, giving them exactly what they are looking for. Once prospects get to your site, the images and words you use are important, but they have to be part of a larger sales strategy, one that incorporates powerful, motivating messages and two-way methods of communication.

About the Author: John Rasco is founder and CEO of RefreshWeb, a company focused on website marketing, and of Brand X Austin, a marketing services network tailored to the needs of emerging companies.



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