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Archive for the ‘Arts & Culture’ Category

Negative, Negative, Negative…

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

So much time, so many things to complain about … especially with all of the bad news hitting the airwaves lately.  Or, at least, that’s what many people seem to be talking about.

But is the word “negative” really all about complaining, negativity, and ‘walking down the shady side of the street?’

Judge for yourself, but the diversity within this list of common “negative” search phrases (search phrases which include the word “negative”) caught me by surprise.  It turns out that “negative” is a lot less unfavourable than assumed.

While several of these phrases definitely include an adverse component (eg. “globalization negative effects”, “negative peer pressure”, “negative reinforcement”, etc.), others are completely devoid of disadvantageous sentiment (eg. “type o negative”, “negative calorie foods”, and “negative numbers”).  It seems that negative and positive are not always at odds with each other.

Interestingly, the SEM phrase “negative keywords” (which refers to a bid-type within pay-per-click advertising) did not appear in the top 10 phrase list above.  In fact, “negative keywords” only appeared waaaaay down near the bottom of a more exhaustive list of 2600 “negative” searches. I guess there aren’t that many webmasters out there looking for an easy way to reduce wasted spending on their advertising campaigns!

A few of the funnier searches included on the full list of 2600 searches include:

  • “negative creep” – (We all know one!)
  • “negative amortization” – (Good luck with that…)
  • “negative stain” – (Perhaps from some spilled negative calorie food??)
  • “negative pressure rooms” – (Sounds like a fun toy)
  • “negative happy chainsaw” – (An indie Japanese movie, I believe…)

Negative or positive, this small glimpse into the world of search has once again proved curious and surprising!

Epiar is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

BBQ Recipes: This Summer’s Tastiest Blog Post

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Summer is just around the corner and when company’s coming you can expect cold beer and hot flames shooting out your trusty backyard grill. But while you put off refinishing your cracked cedar deck another year, you might also be considering what your next BBQ feast should entail. Timeless cookbooks and, now, the Internet might help tantalize those taste buds. Let’s examine what your amateur chef counterparts are searching.

As you could have guessed, the staples of outdoor cookouts topped the list. Chicken, ribs, pork and BBQ sauces are first to sear atop those red hot bricks of charcoal. Unfortunately for our vegetarians, no specific mentions of vegetable recipes made our list. While our top search of ‘BBQ Recipes’ must surely include some non-meat alternatives, it’s safe to say Babe and his compatriots might not enjoy this season as much as the rest of us.

If your curiosity for the Q hasn’t been satisfied, let’s take a look at some more interesting items that made our research.

  • Graveyard BBQ, 53 daily searches
    • Apparently, a dirtcore band featured in the first release of Guitar Hero.
  • Dinosaur BBQ, 17
    • A hard edged American restaurant chain accompanied by “genuine houserockin’, footstompin’ music…” at least according to their website. Serving up T-Rex sized portions.
  • Aussie BBQ, 13
    • Australians’ are not to be outdone when skewering wild game ala Crocodile Dundee
  • Jack Daniels BBQ, 10
    • Ribs infused with Tennessee whiskey can only enhance Saturday afternoons.

Epiar is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

Bizarre Searches Stranger Than Fiction

Friday, July 6th, 2007

While in the midst of doing research on various projects, the most unexpected phrases keep popping up in our keyword lists – phrases that real people in presumably real situations obviously feel compelled to enter into search engines.

These phrases are bizarre enough on their own, but what really makes me shake my head and wonder is imagining the situations these poor, unfortunate, confused people must find themselves in the first place…

Bizarre Phrases that People Actually Type into Search Engines:

  • My english teacher lost my essay (searched 18 times per day)
  • Whole body donation (22)
  • Shaving horse (27)
  • Cow seeds (6)
  • Underground soil (3)
  • Natural dog (64)
  • Husband doesn’t shower or wear deodorant (5)
  • My husband wears my clothes (10)
  • Why is my husband a jerk (6)
  • How to flirt (179)
  • Why is my honda goldwing to hard to push (15)
  • Holiday meal with no teeth (4)

Epiar Inc. is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

Summer Love or Summer Nights?

Friday, June 29th, 2007

Keeping with our theme of blog posts based upon seasons or holidays, and based on the hope that I will be able to spend more time on a patio with a cool drink as a result… today’s post is centred on summer.

What are searchers looking for in relation to summer? Are they searching for classic summer cocktails or studiously inquiring about summer school classes?

It’s turns out that searchers are doing neither. Looking at the Epiar market search data, we see mainly pop culture references float into the top 10: Justin Timberlake’s song ‘Summer Love’, ‘Summer Fashion’ & ‘Summer Dresses’, the song ‘Summer Nights’ from Grease, the singer/ songwriter ‘Donna Summer’, and ‘Rocket Summer’ a power pop band from Texas.

More traditional summer activities round out the top 10 phrases: ‘summer camps’, ‘summer jobs’, and ‘summer vacation’.

Epiar is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

The Most Famous Harry

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

Harry Who?

We all know Harry is a popular name, but which Harry is the most popular of all?  According to search trends, “the boy who lived” is even more popular than the real life British prince:

Surprisingly, historical Harry’s such as magician Harry Houdini, US President Harry Truman, and singer-songwriter Harry Chapin remain popular well after their deaths.  Additional Harry’s include “Dirty” Harry Callahan, a 1971 movie casting Clint Eastwood as cop Dirty Harry, the gourmet food company “Harry and David”, and musicians Harry Belafonte, Harry Connick Jr., and Debbie Harry.

Epiar is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

DVD Easter Eggs Surpass Real Easter Eggs in Online Search

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

Based on data collected from close to 200 online sources over the past year, “DVD Easter eggs” (hidden items on DVD menus) have now surpassed chocolate and painted Easter eggs in popularity, measured by the number of times each phrase is searched in popular search engines. Similarly, our friend the Easter bunny remains less popular than Easter island.

Surprisingly, an overwhelming portion of searches centered on secular topics, with searches for the Easter bunny, Easter gifts and Easter games far outnumbering searches such as “Easter Sunday” (42 searches per day), “history of Easter” (34), “Easter prayer” (13) and “Easter sermon” (13).  By contrast, even “Easter bunny costume” is searched 47 times per day!

Searches for the spiritual side of Easter in 2007 would seem to remain an offline quest.

Epiar is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports. For a high resolution version of the Easter research graph, please click here.

Christmas Wishes Expressed in Internet Search

Saturday, December 16th, 2006

With the holiday season now clearly upon us, it seems that Christmas is on everyone’s mind. It’s actually very difficult to escape, assuming you’d even want to!

This week, I decided to take a look at the topics and ideas emerging from online Christmas searches to see how people’s internet search behaviour reflects society’s most prevalent web-related Christmas thoughts. Are people thinking about Santa, baby Jesus, Christmas crafts & decorations, a favourite recipe, or what?

The following chart shows the most popularly searched concepts within the top several thousand search phrases that include the word “Christmas”:

Christmas Wishes

Please click here for an expanded list of Christmas wishes as expressed in internet search.

Without surprise, online Christmas searches center around such popular topics as gifts, trees, food, and carols. I find each of these reports very interesting, reminding me how my own views on Christmas are just one of a million possible perspectives on the holiday season. Whichever of these thoughts you choose to focus on this holiday season, best wishes & happy holidays from everyone at Epiar!

Epiar Inc. is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

Chicago Bears & Chicago Tribune Top Chicago Search Statistics

Friday, December 1st, 2006

Many people travel to Chicago or consider the windy city home, but what are people looking for online in relation to the Midwestern city? Tourist attractions, local services, general information, special events, or perhaps something else?

Recent research by Epiar Inc. explored the nature of online search in relation to Chicago. After analyzing the top 7000 phrases with an estimated annual search volume of over 50 million searches, the following topics emerged as the most prominent Chicago search topics:

Chicago Research Chart

Please click here for an expanded report on Chicago online search statistics.

Exploring Chicago Searches

Professional sports fans will be interested to see the high number of searches for Chicago’s football, baseball, and basketball teams. Apparently, the Bears’ very successful season is not limited to only the football field. It is amazing how searches for sports teams compare in number with searches for other Chicago features and indentifying characteristics – who knew professional sports were really that popular?

Tourist institutions and special events also appeared prominently within internet search, with the Chicago Marathon, the Chicago Auto Show, and the Art Institute of Chicago all attracting significant levels of public attention. Which local attractions do you think people might be searching for around your home town?

Searches by people in need of local services were also high, with phrases like “jobs in Chicago”, “home inspection Chicago”, and “Chicago police” in high search demand. Presumably, many more searches for local services are also being entered without the word “Chicago” in the phrase, possibly including a neighborhood geographic reference instead or no geographic mention at all.

With all of this talk about Chicago, it makes me want to go there to see if the search frequency research properly reflects the real city – good thing a couple of us from Epiar will be in town to present at a Search Engine Strategies conference there later this week!

Epiar Inc. is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

Bizarre Internet Searches – Do People Really Search That?

Sunday, October 15th, 2006

One of the finest joys of performing advanced keyword research (looking into the hearts and minds of our society by probing millions of unique search phrases) is encountering the stream of absolutely ridiculous phrases that people are, for one reason or another, entering into search engines.

Over the course of the past year, I have begun documenting several of the most absurd of these search phrases. In fact, the coil-bound notebook that sits beside my monitor has become one of the strangest and most curious books I have encountered – strange because of the very human reality behind each new entry.

What does it mean when significant numbers of people all search for the same bizarre topic? What thoughts and situations give rise to someone entering these phrases in the first place? If thinking about the individuals and real-life situations that create these search statistics don’t make you smile or shake your head in wonder, I can’t imagine what will!

Bizarre Phrases that People Actually Type into Search Engines*:
* using Wordtracker data spanning August 2005 – October 2006

Creative Home Projects:

  • how to build a catapult (searched 230 times per day)
  • how to eat fried worms (696)
  • how to make a toga (448)

People Still Learning the Basics:

  • what is history (205)
  • open a beer bottle (22)
  • when did christianity start (61)
  • what is a search engine (276)

Huh??

  • box full of sharp objects (185)
  • insanity test (322)
  • monkey business (195)

Self-Help Dieticians:

  • how to gain weight (407)
  • how to be anorexic (193)
  • beer into g feeding tube (15)
  • how to make moonshine (173)

Health:

  • self injury tricks (27)
  • can stress cause hives (90)
  • pictures of scurvy (40)
  • donate a testicle (193)

Searches by Animal Lovers:

  • realistic stuffed shih tzus (36)
  • fainting goat video (28)
  • exploding whale (156)
  • bear vs shark (72)
  • biggest bear ever (54)

People Hoping Search Data Stays Anonymous Forever:

  • guide to stretch your anus (153)
  • men in panties (1611)
  • hairy oshawa women (6)
  • pull my finger (186)
  • atomic wedgie (298)

The Search Continues…

  • loch ness monster (2044)
  • ghost pictures (1209)
  • real ghosts (337)
  • pirate treasure maps (275)
  • proof that elvis is alive (18)
  • ufo sightings (705)

Conclusive proof that the truth is stranger than fiction? Who enters all these phrases anyway?

Epiar Inc. is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.

Search Demand for the NFL: Jerseys, Cheerleaders, Betting & More

Saturday, September 23rd, 2006

Just a few weeks into the National Football League season, what words and phrases are curious fans typing into search engines when thinking about the NFL? According to recent internet search statistics, topics such as jerseys, predictions, draft picks, betting, and cheerleaders are all high on eager fans’ minds.

Taking a look at the top 4200 phrases entered into search engines over the past 90 days that include the word “NFL”, recent research by Epiar explored the nature of online search surrounding one of America’s biggest professional sports leagues.

Amazingly, while only tracking search phrases that include the word “NFL” (leaving out countless additional football-related search phrases, such as the names of popular players, teams, stadiums, cheerleaders, former stars, etc.) clear trends in public search became clear:

NFL Internet Market Research Chart

To view a full report of these internet searches, please download the complete “NFL” search phrases report.

More Information, Please?

Searches for informational resources such as game predictions, NFL history, injuries, schedules, and fantasy football were quite high. Popular examples of common search phrases include:

  • “NFL predictions” (searched 218 times per day)
  • “Free NFL football schedule” (199)
  • “2006 NFL predictions” (150)
  • “NFL rules” (78)
  • “NFL game picks” (77)
  • “Live streaming video NFL” (66)
  • “NFL football history” (43)
  • “NFL week 1 predictions” (39)
  • “Free NFL football odds” (39)
  • “NFL trivia” (33)

Do I detect a series of linkbait opportunities or easy topics for adding informational resources to increase traffic to a merchandise site? For a complete listing of NFL information-based search phrases, check out this NFL informational resources report.

The Hand-off from Search Frequency Research to E-commerce:

Searches for NFL merchandise were also high, with fans most frequently searching for “jerseys”, “helmets”, “hats”, and “shirts”. With regard to jerseys, searches for “authentic NFL jerseys” (searched 80 times per day), “NFL throwback jersey” (71), and “youth NFL jerseys” (59) were particularly high.

Curiously, in response to this search demand by interested consumers, a quick scan of the top-ranked PPC sporting-goods stores shows very sparse (if any) placement of these phrases on their landing pages. In fact, several of these sites don’t offer “throwback” jerseys or “authentic” jerseys at all. I guess these web marketing departments have decided to build fancy web sites, pay advertising $’s to get visitors, and then not offer the products that people are asking for? Sounds like a strange way of making money to me! Too bad they didn’t invest in a little market research before figuring out what to sell…

Epiar Inc. is an Edmonton-based internet market research and search engine optimization company. Please contact us for more information or to commission your own research reports.