You probably
haven’t given a lot of thought lately to vertical search
results, that thin sliver of search real estate that is
sandwiched between the top sponsored ads and the top organic ads
that generally shows a few lines of news results, or local, or
products. I have. Don’t panic, there’s really no reason why you
should have. It’s really just a sad comment on my day to day
activities. But I’ve noticed some things, and I think its
incumbent upon me to share them with you. So let’s get vertical
for a few moments, shall we?
In a Location Near You
First, this is prime real estate. When vertical results appear
on the major engines, they appear smack in the middle of the
hottest part of the page. After a number of eye tracking
studies, we can say with a degree of certainty that most
searchers (upwards of 80%) at least look at the top sponsored
ads and the top 3 or so organic ads. That means that vertical,
wedged in between, will be at least grazed over by a lot of
eyeballs.
But position is not enough. Working the Vertical angle is not
just about grabbing some prime real estate. Verticals have to
offer information scent. The information, links and visual cues
they offer have to align with the user’s intent. In one bizarre
example we saw during the latest study, somebody searched on
Google for “digital cameras”. For some reason, Google saw fit to
return news results for digital cameras. Now, just what
percentage of the over two million people who searched for
“digital cameras” last month (a quick estimate courtesy of
Yahoo!) do you guess would be looking for the scoop on how Nikon
had to recall 710,000 digital camera batteries? Maybe the ex
product manager from Nikon, in between looking for new jobs on
Monster, but that’s about it.
Hopelessly Devoted to OneBox?
While we’re on the subject, what’s the deal with Google and
verticals anyway? Search pundit Greg Sterling said in a blog
post some time ago that Google had an “almost religious devotion
to OneBox”, its vertical label of choice. Could be, but it seems
that a few in the temple of Google are questioning their
religious affiliations. OneBox results have been a little
sketchy of late. The reason this came to light is that I’ve just
looked at a 100 plus sessions in Google for a recent study, and
there were surprising few of those sessions with OneBox results
showing.
First of all, they hardly ever show for product based searches.
Try it for yourself. I must have tried over a dozen different
common product searches before I got one that returned Froogle
results via OneBox. Now why would that be? Well, for one thing,
OneBox real estate competes with top sponsored ads, and perhaps
advertisers are starting to resent the increased competition in
their neighborhood for highly commercial searches. If that
theory is correct, it flies in the face of Google’s goal to
provide the most relevant results for each query, no matter what
the source of the results. Another reason might be that Froogle
has never really gained traction as a shopping engine. Maybe
Google’s quiet dialing down the rate of appearance of Froogle
results on the main page is their way of admitting that these
results aren’t adding value to the user experience.
Yahoo Does Vertical Right
If you’re looking at a good example of Vertical execution,
Yahoo! seems to be currently leading the pack with their
Shortcuts. The display of vertical results is consistent, and
they seem to be one step ahead of the competition in aligning
results with user intent.
Here are some examples we saw in the recent study:
One of the tasks given was to research the upcoming purchase of
a digital camera. This resulted in a number of related queries
being used, ranging from very general (“digital cameras”) to
very specific (“Canon Powershot A530”). When these queries were
thrown at Yahoo, the engine was able to differentiate and return
appropriate vertical results. Broad generic phrases returned
vertical results that compared known brands or allowed browsing
by features. More specific queries returned links that lead to
reviews and best prices for that model alone. It was a great
example of results matching intent, and we saw the interaction
with these results go up dramatically as an example.
One very bright thing that Yahoo does consistently in their
vertical listings is provide a 5 star rating scale. It appears
for products, some local results (restaurants, hotels) and in
various other places. When it comes to attracting our eye,
nothing does the trick better than a visual cue that promises
ratings. We love lists that sort from most popular to least
popular. It’s the paradigm of the consumer researcher, and it’s
something that reeks of scent. We saw eyeballs attracted to
these icons like search marketers to an open bar (come on, I
know many of you are already scoping out the cocktail network
for San Jose).
A Vertical Future
I still believe that Verticals mark a path into searches future,
but until the engines do better at disambiguating intent, either
through personalization, behavioral tracking or just really
smart key phrase parsing, they will be relegated to the thin
sliver of real estate they currently occupy. Their success in
luring users into what Mr. Sterling called a “Page 2” Vertical
experience will lie solely in how well they deliver on intent.