Today the Wall Street Journal broke incredibly sad news [last week]… indeed I think it is one of the saddest moments in my SEO career. Ask.com
is letting go of 40 employees and conceptually restructuring itself by
moving away from mainstream search and focusing on question-related
searches for their supposed primary audience “middle-American,
predominantly female consumers.”

Ask.com is letting go
of 40 employees and conceptually restructuring itself by moving away
from mainstream search and focusing on question-related searches for
their supposed primary audience “middle-American, predominantly female
consumers.”

Now this may just seem like yet another change of direction at Ask (they are fans of change) but the fact that Ask maven Gary Price
was let go made it clear that Ask is no longer interested in competing
with the likes of Google or Microhoo (a popular nod to the impending
doom that is Microsoft buying Yahoo).

So what does this mean to
you and me? Well first, me ;-) I am feeling mighty upset. I was so
upset that I went and took down the painted Ask logo we have in the
StepForth office proudly espousing Ask as a favorite search engine… a
sad day indeed (see picture).

I along with many of my industry
peers had high hopes for Ask. Coincidentally, just last week I took the
Director of Public Relations at Ask, Patrick Crisp,
aside at SMX West and told him how interested I was in working with Ask
to help its profile in anyway possible. I was confident in their
platform and told him what I felt was needed to make Ask a far better
contender in the search market; a larger database, more frequent
indexing, and a face in the industry with a presence similar to Matt
Cutts.

So enough about my pain, what will this mean for you?
Less choice! Just consider this for a second… when Microsoft buys
Yahoo there will only be 2 search engines controlling the majority of
the marketplace. Startlingly, I don’t even think I know of a single
fledgling search engine that has a chance of filling any new void
should one appear. Now don’t get me wrong, I fully expect something
will popup to take advantage of the vacuum that Ask is likely to leave;
after all I don’t expect Ask’s freshly embraced target market will
allow it to expand much past it’s 4% search share.

One
possible contender in the future of search that comes to mind is
currently vapor as far as we all know (because it is not even in public
Beta yet) but it certainly has brains behind it – that is Cuill (pronounced “Cool”). According to one of the keynotes at SMX West by Louis Monier
(Vice President of Products at Cuill, founder of Alta Vista, and past
Google employee), Cuill is attempting to change the way we search to
provide a far more robust and comprehensive search result. I should
qualify that Mr. Monier was careful never to even mention Cuill in his
speech but considering his current affiliation it seems obvious that
Cuill is meant to provide a new innovative search medium. The speech
was a long one with many interesting facets but what stood out was Mr.
Monier’s heartfelt expression of the inherent inadequacy of 10 listings
per search result page; he was right, that is simply not effective
anymore with the growth of the Internet what it is.

Prospective
contenders aside, Ask’s new management has made a decision to give up
the fight for mainstream search and I along with many of my colleagues
are disheartened; we really had hope for this brilliant underdog. I
even wrote an article on how to optimize for Ask.com which I suppose is now bereft of purpose.

Special thanks to Search Engine Land who brought this to my attention and has more info on this debacle.

Ross Dunn is the CEO of StepForth Placement Inc., a search engine marketing company founded in 1997 and based in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. StepForth provides cutting-edge search engine optimization services that provide highly successful, targeted results for its clientele. Ross Dunn is a Certified Internet Marketing and Business Strategist (CIMBS) with a background in web design and online marketing. His broad Internet experience in combination with a talented staff has made StepForth a name synonymous with top results.

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