IndustryEnhancing Your Image with Snap.com

Enhancing Your Image with Snap.com

Logos help build brand awareness, and upstart search engine Snap makes it easy for you to add your corporate image to search results.

Logos help build brand awareness, and upstart search engine Snap makes it easy for you to add your corporate image to search results.

Snap, a search engine that went live last October, is marching to the beat of a different drummer. The search engine is the brainchild of Idealab, the company that launched Overture, among other ventures. You may remember Snap from the heyday of the dotcom boom—a short-lived search site that was owned by television network NBC.

The new Snap uses the same name but has nothing else in common with its predecessor. The new search engine combines technologies from X1 (the same company that powers Yahoo’s desktop search) and data from Gigablast, Looksmart and a number of “anonymous” ISPs.

Unlike the major search engines, Snap allows you to upload a corporate logo that will be displayed with search results. It’s easy to do: Simply visit Snap’s Add Your Logo or product image and follow the instructions there. There are a few requirements: You must be affiliated with a site to submit its logo; the image can only be associated with the root domain; the image must conform to a few technical guidelines.

All images are “verified” before appearing on search results, a process that can take up to several weeks.

Snap already displays images from some sites—particularly well-known brands or web sites. For example, a search for ipod shows logos from Apple, Amazon, C|Net and others in search results.

AltaVista briefly experimented with something similar back in 2001, with “listing enhancements,” but that program quietly disappeared.

Want to know more about Snap? Gary blogged about its launch in Snap To It: New Search Engine Launches, describing Snap’s efforts to harness “user intention” to shape search results. The company also has a unique approach to advertising, allowing marketers to choose from several payment plans including traditional cost-per-click, fixed cost-per-action or variable cost-per-action.

Snap is also quite transparent when it comes to reporting on its performance. Danny wrote about Snap’s unique approach to sharing stats in Snap Stats: Seeing What’s Up With Snap.com. The company provides far more information than any other search engine, including total searches, click-thrus generated, and even revenues generated on a daily basis.

Want to discuss or comment on this story? Join the Google to Snap? discussion in the Search Engine Watch forums.

Search Headlines

NOTE: Article links often change. In case of a bad link, use the publication’s search facility, which most have, and search for the headline.

Book Review: The Skeptical Business Searcher
FreePint Mar 27 2005 3:46PM GMT
Google ensnared in a war of words
International Herald Tribune Mar 27 2005 12:49PM GMT
Ask Jeeves to expand Irish base
Sunday Business Post Mar 27 2005 11:22AM GMT
Seeking a More Intuitive Search Tool
Washington Post Mar 27 2005 3:36AM GMT
Smaller Players Shrug Off Increased Contextual Competition
Clickz Mar 26 2005 5:37PM GMT
Phishing Dips into Yahoo IM
eWeek Mar 26 2005 5:35PM GMT
Tough week prompts closer look at how Google gathers its news
San Francisco Chronicle Mar 26 2005 5:28PM GMT
Three Indians decode Google puzzle
Times of India Mar 26 2005 5:21PM GMT
Google 20% Time
80%.net Mar 26 2005 3:40AM GMT
First look at Yahoo 360
Charlene Li’s Blog Mar 26 2005 3:37AM GMT
BlowSearch launches pay-per-click search engine advertising
InternetRetailer.com Mar 26 2005 3:00AM GMT
Amazon.com Knows, Predicts Shopping Habits
CRM Assist Mar 26 2005 1:30AM GMT
Yahoo Launches Search For Nontraditionally Licensed Content
InternetWeek Mar 25 2005 10:31PM GMT
Crumbling Cookies Threaten SEM and Online Advertising
Search Engine Guide Mar 25 2005 6:59PM GMT
Google rewites calendar
The Inquirer Mar 25 2005 5:46PM GMT

Resources

The 2023 B2B Superpowers Index
whitepaper | Analytics

The 2023 B2B Superpowers Index

9m
Data Analytics in Marketing
whitepaper | Analytics

Data Analytics in Marketing

11m
The Third-Party Data Deprecation Playbook
whitepaper | Digital Marketing

The Third-Party Data Deprecation Playbook

1y
Utilizing Email To Stop Fraud-eCommerce Client Fraud Case Study
whitepaper | Digital Marketing

Utilizing Email To Stop Fraud-eCommerce Client Fraud Case Study

2y