HotBot added a new service known as direct hit. Direct hit
is a company located in Wellesley, MA, whose software, direct
hit provides highly relevant matches to search queries by
measuring site popularity and user behavior after queries.
When you compose a query in HotBot and then visit a site that
was returned in the top matches, the direct hit software takes
note of which web site you visited and even how long you stayed!
After some number of people have executed the same search
and visited different web sites, direct hit builds a database
of sites that people seemed to visit most frequently after
that keyword query.
We have not yet interviewed direct hit and have no information
on how long a web site remains in their "popular list" or
how hard it might be to unseat a direct hit-ranked site. Not
all HotBot search engine queries return direct hit-ranked
results in the top 10 spots – yet. It appears that Direct
Hit requires a certain amount of data before they can return
popularity ranked results.
If you are uncertain whether or not a keyword query returns
direct hit-ranked matches, scroll to the bottom of the first
page of the search results and look for this symbol: If you
see it at the bottom of the page, this keyword query was answered
using the direct hit database. This new technology makes a
top ranking in HotBot even more crucial.
We would hazard a guess that no page can become popular by
direct hit's standards if it isn't a top 10 to top 30 ranked
page first. After all, we know that most people do not scroll
down past the first 10 to 30 matches after they execute a
search. Therefore, it is unlikely that even the best web site
located in position number 98 will ever attract enough visitors
to be seen by direct hit's system.
Direct hit is not a fad. This company's business plan was
the winner of the 1998 MIT $50K best new technology competition,
and the company is funded by Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Mosaic
Venture partners. They're here to stay so, get used to this
system. It could even be adopted by other search engines,
so now is the time to start achieving top 10 rankings
From the Horses Mouth
We had the pleasure of interviewing a senior director at HotBot, and he was kind enough to volunteer a great deal of valuable information. He has asked us not to use his name and we will honor his wishes and simply share his insights.
HotBot has quickly become a serious contender and more and
more important to web site marketers. HotBot won an upset
victory in the recent CNET search engine rankings. We use
the phrase "upset" because who would have guessed that a search
engine once considered a fringe engine would have beaten out
AltaVista and Infoseek? HotBot's recent addition of 24 to
48 hour indexing, increasing their database size to 110 million
documents, and terrific press coverage makes them a force
on the web.
HotBot is the search engine designed and run by those darlings
of the internet, wired magazine. HotBot has many interesting
features, but the most important, as far as you're concerned,
is that it allows you to report low rankings!
Even better, if a site is ranked above your site that doesn't belong there, HotBot encourages you to report what it calls "obviously silly rankings" to feedback@ hotbot. com. Did someone stuff their keyword and description META tags with off-topic keywords just to get listed under a keyword that is very relevant to you? No worries, report them and they're gone!
Our contact told us of HotBot's target niche in the search engine market, namely to be a superior search tool by having the largest database and the largest amount of data indexed about each site. Specifically HotBot indexes all sorts of information about what's on your site and allows users to perform restricted searches by:
- URL · media type
- Pages that have acrobat · audio files
- Shockwave · even an obscure file type
- Searches within date ranges
Our contact at HotBot suggested that to achieve a high ranking, look to see if the keyword you are trying to optimize your page for appears in the page title, how frequently it appears in the document, and how close to the top of the document it appears.
We asked him to confirm the rumor that HotBot no longer considers keywords in the title tag for relevancy. He refuted this and offered that HotBot will consider keywords in the title tag, but if they are not included, it will not mean the site won't be returned for a keyword query. He also suggested that since HotBot allows you to search the Web by Web site title, you should be especially concerned about keyword placement in this tag.
He went on to inform us that HotBot is not header tag <H1> through <H6> sensitive, but HotBot weights keywords near the top of your page, and headers are often located there. |