Find us elsewhere
Join Now Member Login

How do you search the internet?

 
New Topic
Post Reply
Follow Topic
Page of 2 Next »
  • Author
  • Message
 
houseofjerkyjanie

posts: 1150

Oct 21, 2007 12:27 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
There`s been many discussion on the importance of page rank.  Searching google for many popular keywords, you can find sites with a pr 3.,4 and 5, on the first page.  So how do they get there, with lower page ranks?  What is the importance in page rank then?
 
How do we search?
 
Do you click on the first results?  Do you scroll down the page?  Do you click on google adwords campaigns?
 
What makes you click on that site,...... you know you were looking for something. :)
 
iouone2

posts: 1185

Oct 21, 2007 12:50 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
I never click on google ad words. I just don`t trust it. It`s a "paid" slot. I get enough advertising without google ad words.

I do scroll down the page when looking for results. I generally take a quick look at nearly every result on the first page. I will then check the second page of the results for "interesting looking" links. In all situations I DO read the short description below the search result links.

On the first page`s links, as I said, I will look at each page, but maybe only for 2 seconds. If I don`t find the content reflecting my search desire within a very short time, I move to the next.

Note... When I look at the search results, "links" of the first page, I "open a new window" for each. That way when I glance at it for 2-3 seconds, I just close the window and look at the next one. (BTW Macintosh, Firefox allows me to open a new window behind the page I am viewing with the `apple key` and a click. So opening ten pages behind my search results, is very fast.)



-------------------------

Vincent Wilcox (a.k.a. KRAKR)
Drummer
My band: Letters Make Words
Nuevolution

posts: 1223

Oct 21, 2007 5:24 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
House...
To be honest with you, I don`t click on the first 3 results or on the first page at all... One of the reasons is that "there`s so much stuff out there these days, and just because they are showing up on the first page, doesn`t mean you have what I am looking for.
Just because I get a search return with the key word that I typed in , doesn`t mean you have what I am looking for. Most businesses, that advertise on google, are more concerned on ranking and traffic  than selling you  a  product.
As I asked one of my customers, what are you more concerned about, making a sale or knowing that you are number two google [when you search for his products] his response was, as long as he knew he was number 2 he was OK because he knew that eventually he would be number 1 [ego-trip don`t you think?]...
I usually start at about page 7 or 8.... I tend to find more relevant stuff on those pages than on the first 2 or 3 pages..


-------------------------

Edgar Monroy
Web Developer / Owner / Consultant
When starting your own business the need to "know-how" is greater than money!
http://www.nuevolution.net
Webline

posts: 687

Oct 21, 2007 7:44 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
I read the descriptions to see if they contain what I`m looking for ( one of the reasons I tell people to use meta descriptions in their SEO ). If it doesn`t give me the impression that it has what I want, I skip it.

Often, the best result is not on page 1.

As far as PR, I ignore it.



-------------------------

M Hall
Website Critique Community
International Society of Curmudgeons


blondieblue

posts: 143

Oct 21, 2007 8:04 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
There`s been many discussion on the importance of page rank.  Searching google for many popular keywords, you can find sites with a pr 3.,4 and 5, on the first page.  So how do they get there, with lower page ranks?  What is the importance in page rank then?
 
How do we search?
 
Do you click on the first results?  Do you scroll down the page?  Do you click on google adwords campaigns?
 
What makes you click on that site,...... you know you were looking for something. :)
 

Jason Miller wrote a great article about just what you are asking ...

Here`s the link ..

http://archive.webpronews.com/2007/0118.html

 

vwebworld

posts: 1237

Oct 21, 2007 9:17 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote

It depends upon what I am searching for... if I am searching for a product then I look at the "onebox" in Google and the first page (other pages if the results on the first page do not fulfill my search needs).

If I`m searching for a solution (more complex - multi-worded search) then I`ll explore many pages.

Another interesting question would be what search engine is used. I primarily use Google, but do check other search engines from time to time.

PR - I disregard PR. It is not relevant nor a true indicator of anything since it is not a real time indicator.

I might click on an ad if it looks like a promissing solution, but for most searches I not not even look at ads.

For specific information, I have already bookmarked websites/forums that are resources for specific topics.. and I usually do not search for more information on general search engines.

~Roland



-------------------------

Web Design | Best Beef Jerky | ecommerce articles | Follow vwebworld on Twitter
nhgnikole

posts: 2660

Oct 22, 2007 3:14 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
I scroll down the page and read the context in which the words are appearing, perhaps click on a few and click back to the search results, sometimes make it to page 3 or 5 if I`m really digging deep!

If I don`t like the first 10, I`ll often change my search terms until I get a better mix of results on the first page.

I use a lot of syntax in my searching vs. the average user ... quotes vs not, operators, limitations such as dates or sites, exclusions by date or site, ordering changes, etc.

As per Roland`s bookmark thing (made me think about my own) ... I don`t use bookmarks. (Seriously!) I have about 14 of them across my Firefox window for particularly hard to remember URLs like how Target makes you dig for the login to their credit card. For the rest ... I have probably a few hundred at least that I`ve simply memorized fully. (I can also recite every phone number I`ve had in my life, every domain I`ve ever worked on, and every house number I`ve lived at! I can promise you no one at SuN was thinking someone memorized the URL structure when they went and changed it on me!!!) For a hundred or more additional, I just visit enough that if I start typing, the Firefox history will fill out the rest for me, or I know the name to exactly quote it for a Google search.
Yeah, I`m scary like that. If you ever need to know the entire preamble to the Constitution, all the presidents in order, a whole bunch of the number Pi, or a lifetime of useless animal facts, I`m your girl!
Webline

posts: 687

Oct 22, 2007 5:11 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
Jeez ... most mornings I have trouble remembering my own name.

-------------------------

M Hall
Website Critique Community
International Society of Curmudgeons


oleg

posts: 185

Oct 22, 2007 9:56 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote

If I`m looking to buy something, I will click mainly on first-page results, including the sponsored links.

If I`m looking for information, I will ignore the sponsored link but will scroll through several pages until I find the relevant info.



-------------------------

Oleg Issers | StartupNation.com Web Team

50% of computer programming is trial and error. The other 50% is copy and paste.
nhgnikole

posts: 2660

Oct 22, 2007 1:39 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
Jeez ... most mornings I have trouble remembering my own name.


Haha ... I didn`t say that I didn`t have trouble remembering my own!!
Page of 2 Next »
Post Reply
 
.
Advertisement

Keep the Community Clean!

  • StartupNation forums should be used as a platform to learn, educate others, share stories, tips & tricks and to provide constructive feedback.
  • Please do not use the Forums for advertising & blatant self-promotion.
  • Please be respectful to other members and refrain from personal attacks and vulgar language.
  • StartupNation reserves the right to delete any message, reply, and/or member who violates our terms of use.
Read full terms of use
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement