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Search Gets Passionate in Vegas
November 15, 2006 |
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I’m a huge fan of passion. Curb the urge to snicker. When I say passion,
I refer to it in the ideological way, not the sensual one (although I’m
pretty fond of that as well). I believe passion trumps everything else:
intelligence, education, money, social connections. Look at when people
have really moved the world in a meaningful way, and you’ll always find
passion.
3 Degrees of Passion
In the past week, passion has manifested itself to me in 3 very
different ways.
First of all, I sat for two hours while former President Bill Clinton
talked about his Foundation, his view of the world as an interdependent
global village and the unsustainable inequities between North America
and everywhere else that must be addressed. The presentation was smooth
and friendly, but the passion was palpable. This was a man on a mission.
Clinton’s got some burning issues on his agenda, and I have to believe
he’s going to move the world and make them happen.
This morning, I was at Webmaster World’s PubCon in Las Vegas and Guy
Kawasaki took the stage. Kawasaki has passion. In fact, it was one of
his 10 Take Aways: Make Meaning. Do something that matters. Be
passionate.
Later in the day, I met with John Slade, the product manager in charge
of Yahoo’s new Panama Ad Management platform. He was supposed to give me
a feature run through, and I was supposed to give user feedback. Try as
we did to stick to that agenda, we kept getting sidetracked talking
about how search is changing everything. We became more animated as we
talked. Passion snuck in and kept hi-jacking the conversation. We ran
about an hour over what we had scheduled.
Search: Passion to Spare
That’s what I love about search, especially where it sits today. It
breeds passion. It demands passion. It grabs you by the throat and makes
you realize that it could change everything. I suspect there was a time
when Wired ex-editor John Battelle didn’t let search keep him up at
night. But at some point, he looked at what was happening, and more
importantly, what could happen and said, “Damn, (if you know John, I
suspect this wasn’t the exact word he used), this is changing the
world!” He became passionate about search. That’s probably why he’s also
here, in Vegas with a bunch of web-heads, as one of the keynotes.
When you walk down the halls of a show like this, people are talking
about search. We’re ravenous about this topic. That’s why there are back
to back events filling the calendar from January to December. Just this
week, I wanted to be at the Search Insider Summit, but unfortunately it
coincided with PubCon and I had a previous commitment.
Talk to the people at Google, or Yahoo. They know they’re at the cusp of
the future. They know the import of what they do. They’re fired with
passion. Why didn’t I include Microsoft? To me, the passion for search
isn’t seared into the corporate DNA at Microsoft to the same extent it
is at its rivals. They’ve said the right things about search. I’ve met a
lot of people at Microsoft who get search, and many of them are
passionate. But at Yahoo, and even more so at Google, the passion for
search is pervasive. At Microsoft, it still feels more like a corporate
initiative.
Late to the Party? Look for Passion.
When you look at the people who make this industry tick, they are
absolutely infatuated with search. It borders on obsession. It’s not to
make a buck, because believe me, there are easier ways. We’ve been
slogging it out in the trenches for years, going from show to show,
spreading the gospel, educating clients and bit by bit, building best
practices and pushing the industry forward. There are not a lot of rich
search marketers, but there are bushels of passionate ones.
So, for those of you waking up to search, here’s a tip. If you’re an
agency or a large organization that wants to build search capabilities,
look for passion. Don’t just look for someone competent, look for
someone who can become passionate about search. Because that’s what it
will take. Here’s why.
Search is just beginning. The rules are constantly going to change. What
you do today is not what you’re going to do tomorrow. This is not a 9 to
5 job. The only way you can keep up with the pace of change that’s
inevitable is to live, eat and breathe search. You have to be constantly
looking at the horizon to see what’s coming not because you have to, but
because you can’t imagine doing anything else. As search continues to
define itself, it will be the passionate people who do it. As I sit here
in Vegas, that’s probably the safest bet in town. |
Gord Hotchkiss
President and CEO
Enquiro Full Service Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Positioning by Searchengineposition
Blog: www.outofmygord.com
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