Hi I don't usually get involved in these discussions - but - if you use a "google" search for Australian Shelf Company you get the first two on the list being my company and I can assure you I haven't paid for it. In most search engines us or Shelfcom come first and second If you want to get to the top of a search engine list ... study the other pages found first, find a common denominators Then build them into your pages. We did this years and years ago and we still surface at, or near, the top in most search engines, Try it - don't debate it Peter Dean Chairman - The Instra Group (including www.incorporate.com.au) At 12:29 PM 1/17/02 +1100, you wrote: >Saliya > >This is not proof, but it may help you. > >Go to alltheweb search engine and search for "valottery" > >The first 2 results will be from the valottery.com website. The 1st has no >reference in the html to valottery. The 3rd result has valottery in its >title, metatag title and a javascript. > >-----Original Message----- >From: Saliya Wimalaratne [mailto:saliya§hinet.net.au] >Sent: Thursday, 17 January 2002 11:59 AM >To: dns§lists.auda.org.au >Subject: Re: [DNS] thread.119 > > >On Thu, 17 Jan 2002, Kim Davies wrote: > > > | Anybody else think they know a search engine where sites get a > > | better ranking purely because they have a domain name which > > | matches the search query (and not because they paid money)? > > | Bonus points if its a search engine people actually use. > > > > I don't think you are going to get a definitive answer to this. I would > > think it reasonable that a search engine could use the URL as some > > criteria in evaluating the page. > >I think it's reasonable too. But the question is not whether it is >reasonable; it is whether it *happens*. None of the documentation I have >looked at lists domain name as a criterion for any of the major search >engines. The documentation *does* list other criteria; so if the domain >name is used, it is not important enough to be mentioned in the >information pages. > >Hence the theorem that it is not used. Perhaps the theorem should be >amended to 'it is not used in any significant capacity': for the purposes >of annulling the 'generic names are intrinsically valuable' argument, the >second theorem is as good as the first. > > > Of course, if everyone is being literal in saying that domain names > > are not used by search engines, you'll be pleased to know if you go > > to Google and type in "cars.com" the first hit is www.cars.com, > > similarly for "home.com", "science.com", "television.com" etc. > > > > I guess to really prove that search engines consider domain names in > > queries, if I type in "cs.curtin.edu" into Altavista the top matches are > >I expect that this is a specific function of altavista: it has recognised >that you put in a domain name or part thereof, so restricted itself to >that domain. To apply to the current discussion, just use 'cs', or >'curtin', or 'edu' or some other word not recognisable as a domain name. > > > As for the the more general question of generics having no success > > compared to other domains, as I said a month ago: There are a number > > of generics that have succeeded, and given that generics are in such a > > small minority, I think it is unreasonable to assert they are failures > > with no value. > >Yes, that assertion is just as unreasonable as the assertion that a >generic domain is a guarantee of success. > > > The fact is, many people think they are valuable. If anyone here wants > > to convince them that they are not then I think you are probably wasting > > your time. Let them find out for themselves. > >In some senses you're right: the people I'm aiming at are those that are >actually going to shell out the bucks; not those trying to sell the >domains. The sellers are always going to try to sell; but the buyers >should be armed with *some* information :P > >Regards, > >Saliya > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- >List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://www.auda.org.au/list/dns/ >Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the >author, further information at the above URL. (331 subscribers.) > >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- >List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://www.auda.org.au/list/dns/ >Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the >author, further information at the above URL. (331 subscribers.)Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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