Some terrific charts, stats and research came out of Yahoo!'s Analyst Day PDF file (too bad it's a PDF). I thought it would be worthwhile to explore some of the trends Yahoo! is pointing to out of self-interest and expand their definition for the whole of the web industry:
One of the things Yahoo! has going for them is their strong foothold in the Asia-Pacific market, which is set to be the world leader in web users in just 4 years. If Yahoo! can win in Asia, they've got a solid chance to re-take the upper hand from Google in the web-control battle. For the rest of us, it's easy to to see how valuable that market will be. If you don't have a project leveraging the Asian market(s), you could be losing out to competitors who do - just remember the advantages that come with being first.
This chart shows the pattern of Internet penetration against Cable TV adoption in the US. The pattern for web adoption is obviously much faster, but it remains to be seen if, in 5-10 years, web access reaches 60-80 hours of usage per month (I'd have to cut back to 25% of my current usage to reach that number).
The trend has moved up to 3.3 words per search on average last year (the unlabeled box looks should be 4 words - Yahoo!'s error, not mine). If this is a trend that continues, we could easily see that between personalization and long tail searches, the world of SEO changes dramatically. Right now, the power of SEO lies in its ability to capture the right keywords that attract the right visitors, but this data could suggest a switch to content capture, ownership and distribution will eventually power the industry.
I love this one. Ours is basically the only media industry not on the verge of stagnation or deep decline. I can't wait until the great newspaper writers of today are hired by the SEOs and bloglords of tomorrow. If I worked at a newspaper, I'd be thinking very hard about my Internet strategy, yet I don't know a single SEO currently working with a major rag...
I'd be really interested to know what the growth rates are for these industries now, just over a year later.
They're all getting their "Internet strategy" from the 3-4 huge corporations that own the major newspaper chains in the U.S.
Blogging is becoming very big with papers -- even our little paper here in the Tri-Cities has its sports reporters writing blogs about prep sports and such. The Tacoma News-Tribune is actually doing pretty well with its sports staff and blogging -- Mike Sando gives better info. on his Seahawks blog than he does in his print articles. :-)
But that said, the main strategy seems to be "fight tooth and nail to grab any eyeball we can for any reason under the sun and let's hope they don't bail on our web content like they do our print content." Which is to say they're just throwing things against the wall and hoping something will stick.....
As someone who spent 7 years working in traditional media, I'd love to take a stab at doing some real web marketing and content development with a paper -- but I don't think any of them have the sense to look outside their own estate.