LookSmart Goes Deep Vertical
In a very interesting bid to revive its fortunes and its consumer brand, LookSmart has launched 160 vertical sites on everything from sports to city guides (here’s New York, for example).
The content comes from Furl, Web crawling and LookSmart’s Find Articles database. The company is hoping the vertical strategy will draw consumers—initially from general Web search and then directly to the site—and bring advertisers looking for higher quality, more targeted ad inventory.
The analogy LookSmart uses is to cable TV: “Like Cable was to television, vertical search is delivering to consumers relevant and essential content versus an exhaustive return on information.”
The architecture of the vertical sites and subsidiary content pages is based on a concept of “find,” “save” and “share,” leveraging the Furl community and functionality (it’s also a backdoor way to introduce Furl to users).
Certainly it creates more targeted ad opportunities, but will it have the effect of raising the prominence of the LookSmart brand in the minds of consumers? That’s unclear. When LookSmart had five verticals several months ago, I thought that was fairly unimpressive. Something on this scale is a different story. (It’s not unlike About.com, but with a twist.)
CEO David Hills is being very thoughtful about strategy, given the position the company is in and has mapped out a diversified plan that includes a mix of technology licensing and advertising products.
As he said to me the other day, “At least now the company has a shot.” I agree. Here’s the earnings release, with the news.
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Greg Sterling, Local Search and Convergence Columnist – Greg Sterling is managing editor of The Kelsey Group who also writes the Local Media Journal Blog.