WE don't normally focus on specific IT products, because,
frankly, there's something "new" out every day. But
occasionally a true breakthrough product comes along that we know our
readers will want to use.
**********
SOZON'S SEOSPY[TM] is just such a product, and we believe it
will revolutionize the way companies in Japan interact with indigenous
Internet search engines.
Surprisingly, the product was developed here in Japan by a foreign
entrepreneur: the self-taught engineer and now managing director of his
own venture, Amir Ayalon. The venture is called Sozon, an abbreviation
of the term "Strategic Optimization Zone," and was started by
Ayalon and his two partners, Yasushi Bamba and Takuo Yamanaka. Ayalon is
playing a significant role in Japan's Search Engine Optimization
(SEO) industry, and we asked him why he thinks Sozon has a strong chance
of becoming a major player on the Japanese Internet scene.
Why is a foreigner creating a Japanese product for Japanese users
and Japanese search engines?
Maybe it's comething to do with my background. I'm not
really rooted in any particular place and am just as happy creating
products here in Japan as I am anywhere else. I was born in Israel, but
from the age of two moved to and grew up in Australia. I came to Japan
in August 1994 to study Aikido and have been here ever since--about 10
years now.
My major interest was marketing, and computers were really just a
hobby. However, like many others I caught the Internet entrepreneur bug
and set up a company with a partner in 1999. We started out by
publishing a subscriber-based, bilingual, offshore tax and investment
newsletter. Although it was popular, we had lots of requests to do
offshore financial structuring, and moved into capital sourcing and deal
making. That led to my interest in starting a business for myself,
eventually in the IT field and in Search Engine Optimization.
Originally I found out about SEO from the practical experience of
promoting our publishing endeavors back in 1999. I did a lot of the work
myself, after reading about how search engines work. While I have no
formal computer education, I've always found there have been ample
resources available to learn what's needed if you are truly
dedicated.
As I successfully promoted our Web sites, other people started
asking me for help with their sites, and so my activities naturally
evolved into SEO/Online Marketing consulting. What I quickly found out,
however, was that many SEO tools available in the US just weren't
able to handle double-byte Japanese Web sites. So I was forced to
manually go through and optimize client sites. But as any webmaster will
tell you, this is a long and tedious task, especially if it has to be
frequently repeated due to new content being posted. So in my spare
time, I came up with the idea of a Swiss Army Knife-type of integrated
SEO tool and finally got to realize that idea last year.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Who are your competitors in SEO in Japan?
There are quite a few SEO consulting companies out there in Japan,
probably over 100, but in terms of a competing software solution, I
don't think we have any direct competitors. There are some freeware
tools out there, but nothing that an end-user could say contains
everything they need. The shareware typically requires software
knowledge and does very specific things, such as measuring your page
rank or checking a site for keyword density. They are not integrated and
they are not easy to use--indeed, they make SEO hard work.
How would you describe your software? Is it an analysis tool, or do
you also automatically modify the target home page as well?
Well, the best analogy is to compare our product to a popular
computerized car tune-up firm in Australia called Ultra-Tune. These guys
allow a mechanic to hook the machine up to a car engine and analyze
everything you'd want to know about the condition of that engine.
Then it spits out a recommendation list of repairs and tunings that
should be performed. Our product, SeoSpy[TM], is very similar in
concept. It's a toolbox for someone wanting to tune-up their Web
site.
But for car tune-up, you basically have to be a mechanic. What
about for SeoSpy[TM]?
Our strength is that SeoSpy[TM] can be used by the client's
own novice Web site maintenance people, without any previous knowledge
of SEO. The software comes with a very deep tutorial to allow clients to
make a proper commitment to getting good SEO results. Also, the reports
given by the software tell the user exactly what to do to boost
one's SEO ranking--where to place specific keywords, for example.
Given that your software is fully featured, is it difficult to
install?
Not at all. We've built it as an ASP application, meaning that
apart from a web browser and Internet connection, nothing else is needed
to access it. Plus, it's very simple to use and can be opened by
multiple users on multiple machines on multiple operating systems,
wherever you are in the world.
The way you use it is that you log in to your SeoSpy[TM] account
using your everyday Web browser, type in the URL of the target site you
want to optimize or analyze, then click on whichever functions you want
to run. Output from SeoSpy[TM] comprises both optimization analysis and
also recommendations. For example, it can tell you which tags you should
add to your site and where to paste them.
Do you have any customer testimonials to share?
We have a translation company client who couldn't get
themselves on the first page of an industry search for a relevant term
such as "eigo honyaku service." After using SeoSpy[TM], and
getting some consulting input from us, they are now usually in the top
five to 10 results returned.
Of course, the value to them is in the actual new business
developed, and it's a numbers game. Since they are getting so many
more visitors to their site, and because they show up on very specific
searches, the quality and volume of actual inquiries coming through has
really taken off. As a result, they're making real money.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Another client example is a language school, a Japanese company
teaching English, Spanish, French and other languages. They're
getting about two to five times more traffic now, and students are
regularly signing up on line.
These are regular mid-sized firms you're talking about, not
just large brand-name companies?
Exactly. Although we love to help brand-name companies as well,
it's the small- to medium-sized enterprise firms (SMEs) that can
get the most bang for the buck from a well-executed SEO program.
We imagined that SEO would be expensive. But the price is amazingly
cheap.
It's all part of our strategy to set ourselves up as the
default standard for SEO in Japan. We've kept the software side of
things extremely low-cost, and a package typically starts at [Ren]30,000
a year per URL. If you were to compare this expense to ads in Internet
media, for SMEs at least, the SEO value proposition is very compelling.
We also have discount programs for people with a lot of URLs.
That's a great price! Why have you been able to gain
leadership in this niche in Japan? There are plenty of SEO software
companies in the US.
For foreign SEO companies, Japan is challenging. It's a
combination of language issues--your software has to be able to support
JIS, Shift-JIS, and EUC--and awareness of how Japanese search engines
work and rank pages. Foreign SEO firms see Japan as a tough nut, and as
a result, they simply don't target the Japanese engines.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
One example of how things are different, although this is probably
more attributable to time lag, is the way SEO applications in the US
have to stay in closer touch with the latest search engine trends.
For example, Google in the US is now placing more ranking weight on
semantics (the interrelationship of words to define the meaning and
value of a document). In Japan, the engines don't use semantics
yet, and the emphasis is more on keyword positioning, linking
strategies, et cetera. So for a US SEO company, this would mean having
to maintain multiple versions of a software package, keep abreast of
changes to multiple engines (for a complex language) in addition to the
logistics of providing support to a totally foreign market.
How complex are the calculations you use to get your optimization
recommendations?
More than just complexity, a significant issue is having a great
deal of experience and experimentation in learning how Japanese search
engines work, how they change and how to detect those changes. Part of
our intellectual property is in having found out that because most
search engines have so many variables, it's often better not to
have to know them and think about them all. Instead, we let SeoSpy[TM]
do the brunt of the work by averaging out the results from the vast
amount of data coming in to our application every day, analyze any
general changes or trends and then modify our algorithms accordingly.
Needless to say, the weightings to get the right results are
different for each engine. So rather than reverse engineer, we instead
engage in automated analysis to yield patterns and gain a guideline to
the right weightings--one for each major search engine target.
Most people with Web sites imagine that SEO is all about knowing
how many times to put a certain word into your page so that it will come
up on the search engines--without inserting it too many times so that
you get dumped for "loading" up the Web site on purpose. How
do you find out what the threshold levels are?
COPYRIGHT 2004 Japan Inc.
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