Posts tagged as:

CSE

Become.com has had their Affinity Index Ranking (AIR™) technology patent approved by the US Patent Office.

That is the news out of the Sunnyvale, California headquarters.  It is big too, as Become.com is a fast growing comparison shopping engine who prides itself on this technology. This technology assigns relative rank values to links (web pages) by analyzing quality points in a nodal network.

“Rather than rank pages based on keyword saturation and position, AIR provides the most relevant pages higher positioning while avoiding vulnerability to the artificial Web that such conventional link analysis often falls prey to. ’We are extremely pleased about our patent. AIR technology provides a more intuitive ranking that isn’t spammed through keyword stuffing,’ says Become’s CEO and founder Michael Yang. ‘Our shoppers want relevant product information while comparison shopping on Become.com and AIR delivers it.’ “Become.com Press Release

It is a huge advance towards a spam free index, with no keyword stuffing.

What you need to know about Become.com:

Become.com is establishing itself as a player in the comparison shopping engine environment. Become is a classic model CSE that is great for consumer product research and comparison. Become accepts data feeds, FTP uploads and crawls the Web for shopping related pages to identify changes to existing pages.  They are a CPC based pricing model with free setup. Minimum bids are required, based on the category your products.

Sign up your online store with Become.com now. Visit https://www.become.com/merchant/SignUp.aspx

{ 0 comments }

E-commerce marketing is experiencing a welcomed re-birth, and it only stands to get better. With the combination of emerging technologies, m-commerce, social commerce and comparison shopping engine opportunities, it’s becoming hard for even the most seasoned e-tailer to know if they are doing everything they can to stay ahead of the competition.

When Google Product Search began using a relevancy algorithm (2008) to determine product-specific search results, the landscape of comparison shopping changed. This landmark change which determines how and why products rank within their comparison engine has given rise to an explosive & emerging marketing strategy – data feed optimization (DFO).

google-sort-by-relevance-graphic2While DFO is often confused with search engine optimization, SEO refers specifically to the modification and enhancement of website coding and content to increase rankings in major search engines such like Google, Bing, and Yahoo;  crawler – based systems.
Data Feed Optimization on the other hand refers exclusively to enhancing website placement within e-commerce driven comparison shopping engines (CSE) like Google Products, NexTag, SortPrice and Shopzilla – non crawler-based systems. Where SEO covers the realm of content search, DFO covers the realm of product search.

The art of data feed optimization relies on the enhancement of the actual CSV, TXT or XML product files, an output file. Each comparison shopping engine (Google Products, Shopzilla) has specific product mapping and formatting requirements to ensure that a participating company’s products are listed and functioning properly. Entry to these CSE systems is done through an API call or via manual submission through FTP. Each time there are changes to a company’s products, the process starts again.

The product data feed file can be extracted from a shopping cart in a multitude of ways yet its extracted form is never optimized, at that point it is simply a feed. It is neither formatted nor optimized. Once extracted the feed must be properly formatted to align the company’s product attributes with the required CSE mapping system. Optimization occurs once the feed is properly formatted, and before it is sent up to the shopping engine or engines.
The true act of DFO optimization goes beyond formatting and deep into the factors that promote keyword relevancy. DFO is the modification of properly formatted product attributes to reach an enhanced level of keyword and product relevancy. Similar to SEO, the byproduct of DFO is higher product placements that yield increased impressions, click-throughs and sales. In addition to basic DFO factors, there are nearly unlimited opportunities to optimize individual and groups of products to increase results. 

 Data Feed Optimization, similar to its SEO cousin, is never a one-time action. There is no such thing as set and forget when it comes to e-commerce data feed optimization and marketing because the majority of popular items sold online are also available by dozens if not hundreds of other retailers simultaneously. As more retailers enter the data feed marketing realm, competition for those keywords increases in real-time.

The dramatic growth of comparison shopping engine use by both e-tailer and consumer, translates to a continuously shifting market where any new business can develop rankings and relevancy in any category, for nearly any commercial keyword – categorical or long-tail.
One thing is for certain, higher product placement equates to heightened results in any search engine scenario.

So the question is – is your product data feed formatted, optimized… or both?

We graciously invite your comments and questions. I’m Drew and I’m here to help!

{ 0 comments }

Comparison Shopping Engine Holiday Rate Changes

by lynbatNovember 4, 2009 Comparison Shopping Engines

‘Tis the season!
For e-commerce stores, that simply means being aware of the annual tradition of comparison shopping engines hiking up their costs per click. In an effort to capture a bit of their own holiday glee, CSE’s like Pricegrabber, NexTag and Shopzilla raise their rates by as much as 25%.
How does that work?
Cost Per Click [...]

Read the full article →

Just Create a Data Feed… Yeah Right.

by lynbatSeptember 2, 2009 Comparison Shopping Engines

Product data feed optimization is simple.  All you have to do is figure out if you can generate a feed from within your e-commerce platform that will perfectly map your product’s attributes to accepted and required attribute fields of each comparison shopping engine.  If that can’t be done, you need to find a way to [...]

Read the full article →