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I would have loved to have been on this panel
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Vinny Lingham is an International Award winning Entrepreneur & Search Engine Marketer. He is currently CEO of Free Website maker, Yola.
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Comments On This Post
September 30, 2006 at 8:08 am
Thanks for the link to the interesting article!
Wikipedia has a good summary about arbitrage Here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrage
I once clerked for brokers on the NYFE, so I do not see anything intrinsically wrong with arbitrage on futures contracts.
According to the article, PPC advertisers can be categorized into separate groups.
As an example of a type, there are PPC advertisers who are marketers (i.e. affiliates) and there are those who are arbitrageurs (i.e. those who would be more interested in pursuing the aggregate price differences among the engines to scoop up a profit). There are likely to be other types as well, but these two tend to be interesting case studies
Neither of these types are intrinsically wrong, however, their practices have contributed to the spawning of some problems in general and for the “innocent search user” specifically.
PPC is not the same as Adsense so can a “Splog Blog” be blamed as well for the “landing pages that offer no value?”
The judgment as to whether search arbitrage is “evil” or not comes into play when the user’s experience is factored in. TrueLocal shouldn’t be asking users for a zip code. Everyone knows that information about people have been aggregated and defined by zip code — Neighbourhood profiles are based on ACORN classifications.
So a question is raised: how can the user’s experience be protected while legitimate business practices are allowed to thrive as well?
Who is given authority to “dictate” the guidelines?
This point should be pondered by those using Google’s Analytics:
The article is truly food for thought and thank you, Vinny, for bringing it to my attention
September 30, 2006 at 6:08 am
Thanks for the link to the interesting article!
Wikipedia has a good summary about arbitrage Here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrage
I once clerked for brokers on the NYFE, so I do not see anything intrinsically wrong with arbitrage on futures contracts.
According to the article, PPC advertisers can be categorized into separate groups.
As an example of a type, there are PPC advertisers who are marketers (i.e. affiliates) and there are those who are arbitrageurs (i.e. those who would be more interested in pursuing the aggregate price differences among the engines to scoop up a profit). There are likely to be other types as well, but these two tend to be interesting case studies
Neither of these types are intrinsically wrong, however, their practices have contributed to the spawning of some problems in general and for the “innocent search user” specifically.
PPC is not the same as Adsense so can a “Splog Blog” be blamed as well for the “landing pages that offer no value?”
The judgment as to whether search arbitrage is “evil” or not comes into play when the user’s experience is factored in. TrueLocal shouldn’t be asking users for a zip code. Everyone knows that information about people have been aggregated and defined by zip code — Neighbourhood profiles are based on ACORN classifications.
So a question is raised: how can the user’s experience be protected while legitimate business practices are allowed to thrive as well?
Who is given authority to “dictate” the guidelines?
This point should be pondered by those using Google’s Analytics:
The article is truly food for thought and thank you, Vinny, for bringing it to my attention
October 9, 2006 at 3:27 pm
I think the Search Arbitrage technique only works for a small group of very specialized PPC experts, which is all Google has managed to eliminate by changing the Adwords landing page algorithm (or Quality Score). However, I agree that Search Arbitrage shouldn’t have existed at the first place, and it isn’t something Google has initially anticipated.
I have a feeling that many Google rules that apply to SEO may sooner or later also apply to PPC.
October 9, 2006 at 1:27 pm
I think the Search Arbitrage technique only works for a small group of very specialized PPC experts, which is all Google has managed to eliminate by changing the Adwords landing page algorithm (or Quality Score). However, I agree that Search Arbitrage shouldn’t have existed at the first place, and it isn’t something Google has initially anticipated.
I have a feeling that many Google rules that apply to SEO may sooner or later also apply to PPC.
July 10, 2009 at 1:52 pm
Thanks for the link to the interesting article!
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