The Search for Search Engine Placement: Pay or Perish?
December 13, 2002
Stephen "Steve" Young- Boston
For businesses large and small, a Web site is an ideal
means, if not the sole means in some cases, for marketing and selling that
business' goods or services. First, the business decides upon, pays for and
registers a domain name. Next, the business engages a Web designer/master to
create an appealing and user-friendly Web environment for customers and
potential customers to visit and use. Finally, the business pays a search
engine registration company to assist it in submitting the site to the hundreds
of search engines so that the customers and potential
customers can find their way to the site. Now all is prepared for the influx of
visitors to the site.
Three months later, however, the only visitors to the site
have been the business owners' close friends and relatives. The business has
thrown a party – at a cost of tens of thousands of dollars – and nobody has
come. Why not? Perhaps, as described in a suit recently filed by San Antonio,
Texas, weight-loss company, Mark Nutritionals, Inc. d/b/a Body Solutions,
because they did not make yet another payment on their way to achieving Web
success -- namely, a payment to obtain favorable placement on search engines.
Background on Paid Placements
Before looking more closely at the claims included in the
Mark Nutritionals case, a brief look at the context within which the case arises
may be helpful. When a business engages a Web master to design its Web site, it
expects that the Web master will format the Web site and use metatags and
various techniques to cause the business' name/Web site to pop up if not first,
at least on the first page, of each of the hundreds of search engines' listings
of responses to a particular word or phrase a potential customer might use to
search for the desired goods or services.
The business’ desire for this result
is understandable since it is generally acknowledged that most Internet users
begin their search with a search engine, and end their search with the first
page that appears in response to the search. Thus, for example, if someone is
searching for weight reduction pills, a company that manufactures such pills
wants its site to appear prominently when the phrase “weight reduction pills” is
used to search the Web. The business would think that an able Web designer, by
the use of the methods mentioned earlier, can make the content/format of the
business’ Web site most relevant to the word or phrase used by the potential
customer, and, therefore, cause the site to pop up first or at least early in
search engines’ results.
Up until about two years ago, relevancy of the Web site to
the search word or phrase was the primary method by which a Web site appeared in
a search via a search engine. Now, that has all changed. Many search engines,
being in the business of making money, and realizing the value to
advertisers of prominent placement on their engines, now provide favorable
placement by levying a charge – the so-called "paid placement" procedure. In
addition, many search engines now charge Web site owners simply to be included
in the results of a search, without any assurance as to how prominently they are
included (called paid inclusion) or, particularly in the case of commercial
sites, to just have their sites submitted to the engine for consideration
(called paid submission).
While this additional layer of payment may seem unfair to a
business that is simply seeking to establish its Web site on the Internet, the
search engines point out that charging a business for placement or inclusion on
or submission to a search engine is no different than charging a business to be
listed in a certain manner in the yellow pages of a telephone directory. Some
advertisers, however, disagree, especially where the search phrase or word being
use is their trademark.
The Mark Nutritionals, Inc. Suit
Earlier this year, Mark Nutritionals, Inc., a manufacturer
of a dietary system, turned to the courts to try to stop what it believed to be
the misuse of their mark by certain search engines. The protected mark at issue
is “Body Solutions,” a name that Mark Nutritionals uses for its weight loss
program. The use Mark Nutritionals alleges violates its mark and constitutes
unfair competition is the practice of search engines’ selling high placement on
their Web sites to the highest bidders for a particular name or phrase that is
trademark protected – in this case the term “body solutions.” The result of
that practice, Mark Nutritionals alleges, is that competitors or others not
authorized to use Mark Nutritionals’ protected mark are able to have their sites
appear first or at least prominently (meaning above Mark Nutritionals' site)
when Web users search by using the phrase “body solutions.” That result, they
say, infringes their rights in and to the trademark “Body Solutions.”
On January 28, 2002, Mark Nutritionals filed suit in the
Western District of Texas, San Antonio Division, against Overture Services,
Inc. In that suit, Mark Nutritionals is seeking compensatory damages of not
less than $10 million and punitive damages of not less than $100 million. The
basis for its claim as it states in its complaint, is that “Overture allows
advertisers . . . to buy their way to the top-ranked results for search queries
using ‘key words’ . . . [and] where there are multiple purchasers of the same
key word, Overture lists the Web sites according to price, with those
advertisers who agreed to pay more receiving a higher rank than those who pay
less.” The result of that procedure is that either a competitor or an
advertiser whose goods or services have nothing to do with “Body Solutions”
displaces Mark Nutritionals’ Web site from a favorable spot on the result page(s)
of advertisers and pushes Mark Nutritionals’ site to a lower position than would
a result based upon relevancy of the site to the search phrase.
This sale by Overture of Mark Nutritionals’ trademark, it alleges, constitutes trademark
infringement, dilution of its mark and unfair competition. In addition to
compensatory and punitive damages, Mark Nutritionals is also seeking an
injunction against Overture’s continuing to engage in this practice.
It is noteworthy that Mark Nutritionals did not name as
defendants in this suit any of the bidders who had obtained a favorable position
on Overture's result page by bidding for the phrase “body solutions.” While
there may be several explanations for why Mark Nutritionals did not name bidders
in the suit, an important one may be that none of the bidders actually is a
competitor of Mark Nutritionals, even though a dilution theory, and perhaps
others, might have been a sufficient basis for Mark Nutritionals to have made
the claim against the bidders.
On the same day Mark Nutritionals filed suit against
Overture, it also filed separate suits against AltaVista Company, FindWhat
Services and Innovative Marketing/Kanoodle.com, Inc. alleging the same
wrongdoing by those search engines that it had alleged against Overture. It did
not, however, sue the popular search engine Google even though Google, like the
other search engines, had paid ads on its results page for the term “body
solutions.” Speculation regarding why Google was not named is that Mark
Nutritionals’ site appeared first on the Google listing, even though,
apparently, Mark Nutritionals did not pay to be included. See
www.searchenginewatch.com, “Search Engine Submission Essentials,” 4/10/2002.
The Future of Paid Placements
As of the date of this article, the search engine
defendants have not filed formal answers to the Mark Nutritionals’ complaints.
Until they do, and until the court rules on the validity of Mark Nutritionals’
allegations, we will not know whether and to what extent the paid placement
practice will be affected. These suits, however, merely seek to restrict the
paid placement practice as it is applied to searches performed by using a word
or phrase that is trademark protected. These suits will not, at least not
directly, impact the general practice of search engines’ obtaining payment for
permitting advertisers to receive favorable placement on the search engines’
result pages. Only time will tell if other legal theories pursued in other
claims against search engines will further restrict that practice. In the
meantime, each business must decide whether it is receiving acceptable placement
on search engine result pages simply by application of the relevancy approach to
placement, or if they will have to enter the paid placement bidding practice to
obtain the results they desire.
For more information, contact Steve Young, toll free, at
888-688-8500.