Top Annual Searches Starting to Roll In
December 1, 2008
Sorry, but I say this every year: The top searches from the engines each year are so damn BORING!
How I wish these lists told us something we didn't already know!
Update: AOL (thanks Quayle)
Reader Ed Brenegar writes: This is a year to change the customer relations game. With less commerce happening, presumably, there is more time for interaction. That interaction has to build the relationships...»
Yup, it makes the perfect gift for that officemate or colleague who you thought had everything... including you! If you order here, I promise to sign it, assuming we can figure out the shipping...
You can also buy the audio version here.
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Comments
But if you didn't have search engines, would you "already know"?
But wait.. didn't you say five years ago how amazing the Google Zeitgeist was? Wasn't that the inspiration to begin work on your book?
And now this same exact concept is.. boring?
Why the change? If it was exciting before, why is it boring now? Certainly the searches themselves change from year to year.. so it's not like those are predictable. Or at least, they are no more predictable in 2008 than they were in 2003.
So what's the source of this change in your perception?
(Personally, they were boring for me back in 2003, as well as now. But I have my own opinions about why that is the case. I'd like to hear yours, if I could?)
It's nice to review and go down memory lane at the end of the year but my fav is Google's :)
The lists just help to further remind us that the internet is a very diverse and crazy place to begin with and expect the unexpected (sometimes) ! Gotta love it
Mike
@JG - It was so exciting to sense what depth lay below the surface of that first Zeitgeist. But they are never plumbed.
I don't recall seeing Dictionary.COM results in earlier years. Interesting trend -- who would have thought that?
http://gaggle.info/miscellaneous/articles/wisdom-of-the-language
;) nmw
Certainly the searches themselves change from year to year.. so it's not like those are predictable. Or at least, they are no more predictable in 2008 than they were in 2003.
AOLs year end list has a ton more stuff than Yahoo & Ask.
Check out the Odds & Ends lists...lots of interesting content.
Don't forget about AOL Search John...one of the highest converting audiences on line.
It was so exciting to sense what depth lay below the surface of that first Zeitgeist. But they are never plumbed.
But to come to Google's defense.. isn't that the whole point of Google Trends? There is a service for you to plumb those depths yourself, if you want. Right?
@JG - yes....Google Trends is good.
Why don't you compare the lists internationally? This would told you something about the search culture of the different nations for example. I wouldn't expect Britney Spears and all those boring celebs on top positions on google.de. Unfortunately I haven't found a similar ranking for the results going through German search engines.
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