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Search engines are one of the web's major resources for driving qualified traffic. Getting listed in a search engine index is not difficult. But getting that all important top 20 listing is a bit more tricky. Maybe you've been wondering how your competition manages to do it?








September 2008




Search Engine Marketing (SEM) is now synonmymous with Search Engine Advertising. It used to be an umbrella term referring to various techniques for acquiring website traffic from search engines, such as:

Search Engine Submission

Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

Pay Per Click (PPC) advertising


Read More About SEM



Blogger

FinalSense

Amazon

Yahoo

Ebay

Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Search Engine Marketing History
History

As the number of sites on the Web increased in the mid-to-late 90s, search engines started appearing to help people find information quickly. Search engines developed business models to finance their services, such as pay per click programs offered by Open Text in 1996 and then Goto.com in 1998. Goto.com later changed its name to Overture in 2001, and was purchased by Yahoo! in 2003, and now offers paid search opportunities for advertisers through Yahoo! Search Marketing. Google also began to offer advertisements on search results pages in 2000 through the Google AdWords program. By 2007 pay-per-click programs proved to be primary money-makers for search engines.

Search engine optimization consultants expanded their offerings to help businesses learn about and use the advertising opportunities offered by search engines, and new agencies focusing primarily upon marketing and advertising through search engines emerged. The term "Search Engine Marketing" was proposed by Danny Sullivan in 2001 to cover the spectrum of activities involved in performing SEO, managing paid listings at the search engines, submitting sites to directories, and developing online marketing strategies for businesses, organizations, and individuals.

Ethical questions

Paid search advertising has not been without controversy, and the issue of how search engines present advertising on their search result pages has been the target of a series of studies and reports by Consumer Reports WebWatch. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) also issued a letter in 2002 about the importance of disclosure of paid advertising on search engines, in response to a complaint from Commercial Alert, a consumer advocacy group with ties to Ralph Nader.

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