A Morning Lecture at Berkeley: Facebook, Time to Find the Value for the Individual

If you've read The Search, you know that my fascination with media and technology flowered while an undergraduate at UC Berkeley, in the Anthropology department. From my first real book related post on Searchblog: Back in the mid 80s I was an undergraduate in Cultural Antropology, and I had…

If you’ve read The Search, you know that my fascination with media and technology flowered while an undergraduate at UC Berkeley, in the Anthropology department. From my first real book related post on Searchblog:

Back in the mid 80s I was an undergraduate in Cultural Antropology, and I had a class – taught by the late Jim Deetz,which focused on the idea of material culture – basically, interpreting the artifacts of everyday life. It took the tools of archaeology – usually taught only in the context of civilizations long dead – and merged them with the tools of Cultural Anthropology, which interpreted living cultures. He encouraged us to see all things modified by man as expressions of culture, and therefore as keys to understanding culture itself. I began to see language, writing, and most everyday things in a new light – as reflecting the culture which created them, and fraught with all kinds of intent, contreversies, politics, relationships. It was a way to pick up current culture and hold it in your hand, make sense of it, read it.

At the same time I was making extra money beta testing some software on a brand spanking new Mac, vintage 1984. Anthropology and technology merged, and I became convinced that the Mac represented mankind’s most sophisticated and important artifact ever – a representation of the plastic mind made visible. (Yeah, college – exhaaaaale – wasn’t it great!).

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NO, Wait, *we* Own the Zeitgeist

I was at Berkeley today, lecturing to a room full of undergrads (I plan to write that up tonight, man, interesting…), so I was a bit behind in email, till I caught up tonight. And there in my in box was a press alert: GOOGLE'S MARISSA MAYER TO ANNOUNCE…

I was at Berkeley today, lecturing to a room full of undergrads (I plan to write that up tonight, man, interesting…), so I was a bit behind in email, till I caught up tonight. And there in my in box was a press alert:

GOOGLE’S MARISSA MAYER TO ANNOUNCE FASTEST-RISING SEARCH TERMS FOR 2007 AND HOST GOOGLE TRENDS TUTORIAL

Every day millions of people use Google(TM) (NASDAQ: GOOG) search to find information, and a snapshot of these searches presents a revealing look into the ideas, opinions, preferences and interests of internet users across the globe. Marissa Mayer, Vice President of Search Products & User Experience at Google, will host an interactive webcast to give reporters an early look at the fastest-rising searches conducted on Google.com in 2007. And, in time for end-of-year story planning, she will demonstrate how Google Trends(TM) can be used as a reporting tool to add color and even visual illustrations and elements.



Given that my book came about, in part, from the first ever annual zietgiest in 2001, I am interested to see what Marissa does. Of course, I am in staff meetings all day, so I cannot attend. Maybe one of you will, and tell us what happened in comments?

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Interesting Study Of Yahoo and Google

From our French researcher, a student-based study of Yahoo and Google, with conclusions that I both agree with (Wikipedia is starting to dominate results) and don't (general search engines have had their day): The detailed examination of links returned is equally instructive. The first link offered by Google and…

From our French researcher, a student-based study of Yahoo and Google, with conclusions that I both agree with (Wikipedia is starting to dominate results) and don’t (general search engines have had their day):

The detailed examination of links returned is equally instructive. The first link offered by Google and Yahoo is identical in 27% of cases. In a previous study (using a slightly different protocol), conducted in December 2005, the proportion was 24%. The order of magnitude is thus similar.

The most surprising result came from the use of Wikipedia. This use was marginal in December 2005 (see study). At the time, for all 10 results on the first page, 2% of the links proposed by Google and 4% of those proposed by Yahoo came from Wikipedia. On the first link alone, Google offered no Wikipedia results (at least not in our sample) and Yahoo offered 7%.

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Will Google Buy Content Companies?

That's what Jon Fine speculates in his BizWeek blog. It's possible, but I doubt it. Owning content means managing content. And that's rather messy. Were Google to get into the game, and were it to be honest about where the true profits in Adsense were, it'd buy Demand or…

That’s what Jon Fine speculates in his BizWeek blog. It’s possible, but I doubt it. Owning content means managing content. And that’s rather messy. Were Google to get into the game, and were it to be honest about where the true profits in Adsense were, it’d buy Demand or Name. But that would be a bit too…validating, wouldn’t it?

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Alibaba Says: Me Too!

Everyone wants into the ad platform game, and as we all know, China is often a bit late to the party. But the first latecomer is nearly always Alibaba, and this time is no exception. The company today launched Alimama, an ad exchange….

Alimama

Everyone wants into the ad platform game, and as we all know, China is often a bit late to the party. But the first latecomer is nearly always Alibaba, and this time is no exception. The company today launched Alimama, an ad exchange.

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Marissa In Action

The search space is again heating up, as social search takes center stage due to the MySpace and Facebook incursions on Google's stranglehold. I had a very interesting talk today with Chamath Palihapitiya, VP of Product Marketing & Operations at Facebook, more on that soon. But it came to…

The search space is again heating up, as social search takes center stage due to the MySpace and Facebook incursions on Google’s stranglehold. I had a very interesting talk today with Chamath Palihapitiya, VP of Product Marketing & Operations at Facebook, more on that soon. But it came to mind as I reviewed this interview on Om Malik’s show (thanks for the tip, Ben). Marissa talks about a lot of things, but I can’t help wondering how much of her time is worrying about social search, about which Venturebeat reports she’s less than enthusiastic.

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Google Denies Legal JARGon

Well, it sure took a while (11 years), but Northeastern University claims to own the patent on Google's approach to search (its intellectual property spawned a company called Jarg). So it sued last week. Thanks to Gary, who has the docs, for the tip. Google responds in the linked…

Well, it sure took a while (11 years), but Northeastern University claims to own the patent on Google’s approach to search (its intellectual property spawned a company called Jarg). So it sued last week. Thanks to Gary, who has the docs, for the tip.

Google responds in the linked Cnet story that the suit is “without merit.”

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On The Link Between Search and Branding

Why won't Yahoo or Microsoft ever spin out search, as I and others have counseled in the past? I had an opportunity to bat that question around with a particularly well informed fellow this week, and the most interesting part of the answer became quite obvious to me: They…

Why won’t Yahoo or Microsoft ever spin out search, as I and others have counseled in the past? I had an opportunity to bat that question around with a particularly well informed fellow this week, and the most interesting part of the answer became quite obvious to me: They need search to protect what they already have: Brand advertising.

Before you declare “What are you smoking, Battelle!?” – it is Friday, but it’s not quite noon, guys – let’s pick this one apart a bit.

Traditional thinking around categories of advertising draw a very clear line between search advertising, which given its deep roots in CPC is seen as driven by direct response (DR), and brand advertising, which has awareness and demand creation as its main goals.

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The Power of Power Searchers

I've posited this in the past, now Compete shows data that backs it (in as much as you buy Compete data): What you find is that the top 1% of searchers performs a full 13% of all searches in a given month. If you extend this to the top…

Jc-Searchpercent2.1

I’ve posited this in the past, now Compete shows data that backs it (in as much as you buy Compete data):

What you find is that the top 1% of searchers performs a full 13% of all searches in a given month. If you extend this to the top 20% the number of queries increase to roughly 70%. So in contrast to the standard 80-20 pareto it appears that in web search there is roughly a 70-20 distribution. So what if we break this out by engine?

I (and I bet you) count myself in the category of power searcher – probably 25-50 searches a day. My mother, well, more like 1-5 a day. If that.

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Speaking of Steve…

I noted earlier that our Web 2 conversation was among the best I've had the pleasure of moderating, and posted the video here. But the really good part was all the way at minute 21, which is a long wait. So I asked our video wizards at Good Productions…

I noted earlier that our Web 2 conversation was among the best I’ve had the pleasure of moderating, and posted the video here. But the really good part was all the way at minute 21, which is a long wait. So I asked our video wizards at Good Productions to send me just the clip where Ballmer goes purple and talks about Microsoft search “dunking on the competition.” It’s priceless.

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