Is A Yahoo Listing Still Worth The Cost?
by Dan Thies


In October 2002, the Yahoo! portal changed the way it delivers 
search results. In the past, the most prominent results were 
exclusively culled from websites listed in the Yahoo directory 
itself. Since October, sites listed in the Yahoo directory no 
longer enjoy this privileged status. 

The Google search engine now drives the primary search results 
on Yahoo. While this is certainly an improvement for users of 
Yahoo search, it's a disaster for many businesses that counted 
on their Yahoo listing to deliver substantial traffic.

This change has also led many site owners to question the value 
of a listing in the Yahoo directory. In this article, I will 
outline the pros and cons of maintaining, or paying for, a Yahoo 
listing. In the process, I will delve into more details of the 
recent changes.

Argument #1: Yahoo Listings Mean Link Popularity

PRO:
Even if the Yahoo listing itself delivers little or no traffic, 
other search engines will rank your website higher if it's 
listed in Yahoo. Because Yahoo is so important, a link from 
Yahoo counts more than a regular link. Thanks to its higher 
"PageRank," Yahoo means even more to Google.

CON:
Yahoo listings do not deliver nearly as significant a
contribution in this area as you might think. You can verify 
this by doing a "backward links" search on Google for any 
Yahoo-listed website. The most important links are listed first, 
and the Yahoo listing is rarely even on the first page of links 
for top ranked sites on Google.

Argument #2: Listed Sites Look Better In The Search Results

PRO:
Websites with a Yahoo listing show up in the combined
Yahoo/Google results with their title, description, and
category from the Yahoo directory. This may boost the response 
when the site appears in the search results. This applies when 
the URL listed in the results is the same as the URL in the 
Yahoo listing. 

CON:
Results listed with Yahoo information include a link to the 
site's category, which may prompt surfers to pass over your 
listing and go to the category. Sites without Yahoo listings 
have the more inviting "search within this site" link, which 
leads to more results exclusively from your site.

So, Is A Yahoo Listing Worth It?

If you have a non-commercial site and can get listed for free, 
of course! If you're not one of the lucky few, though, you have 
to evaluate whether it's worth $299 a year for what amounts to a 
better than average incoming link. Everyone must make their own 
decision. If $299 is small compared to your total marketing 
budget, it may be easier to just continue paying. My own listing 
expires in March, and I don't intend to renew it.

How Can You Profit From The Changes At Yahoo?

The obvious answer is that you must take steps to improve your 
own position in Google's search results. Google's rankings are 
made up of many factors, but the dominant factor is "PageRank," 
which is based on the number and quality of incoming links from 
other websites.

Therefore, the first step in improving your position on the 
Google search engine (and now Yahoo) is to improve your site's 
link popularity. This takes time, and trying to take shortcuts 
can get you into real trouble - Google doesn't like "link 
farms," or any program designed to artificially boost your 
link popularity.

Finding Quality Link Partners Through Google

Since only links from quality sites will count for much with 
Google, let's take a quick look at how you can find these sites. 
Start by targeting the sites that link to existing top-ranked 
sites. You can do a backward links search for any site by typing 
"link:http://www.domain.com" in the Google search engine.

An even faster method is to use the Google toolbar
(http://toolbar.google.com/), which requires Internet Explorer 5 
or greater, running on Windows. With the toolbar's advanced 
features enabled, you can conduct a "backward links" search from 
the "Page Info" menu for any site you visit.

Since Google lists these results in descending order by 
"PageRank," you can quickly determine the best places to get 
links by doing backward links searches on the top 10-20 sites 
for your desired search terms, and seeking links from the top 
10-20 places that link to them.

Links Are Not Enough: Optimizing For Google

While "PageRank" is the dominant factor in Google's algorithm, 
it's not the only factor, and you still need to optimize your 
web pages. This can be a complicated topic, but the most 
important factors are:

- Keywords in the title of the page
- Keywords in headings on the page (H1 or H2 tags),
  especially the first heading.
- Keywords in the body text of the page, particularly the
  first paragraph.

Don't Complain, Act!

By some estimates, Google now controls 2/3rds of the searches 
conducted on the Internet in a given day. Not only is Google.com 
extremely popular in its own right, but Google also controls the 
search results on popular portals like AOL and Iwon.com - not to 
mention Yahoo.

A lot of website owners are complaining bitterly about this 
change. All the more reason for you to take action now, while so 
many of your competitors are busy licking their wounds. With a 
little planning and effort, you could be in a dominant position 
on Google before they even get started.

I wish you success...

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Dan Thies is the author of "Search Engine Optimization Fast 
Start," the ultimate beginner's guide to higher search engine 
rankings - available today at http://www.cannedbooks.com
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