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CEO Has Plan to Get LookSmart Back On Track

CHICAGO — With the gamble he’s taking, Dave Hills is going to look smart, or he isn’t.

The president/CEO of LookSmart put in place a recovery strategy for a search engine once known for fraudulent traffic through robotic clicks. Vertical search is one element of that turnaround, syndicating technology is another and a paid listings ad network is the third.

“I’ve got this from being vilified to now we have a shot, and it’s down to our ability to execute it and then, assuming I execute properly, we’ll be successful,” Hills said at yesterday’s Search Engines Strategies show.

Hills joined LookSmart in October 2004 after a year as president of 24/7 Real Media North America. He was chief operating officer of About.com from 2001 to 2003. Before that, Hills spent 21 years at Cox Enterprises, where he placed newspapers online in the 1990s on the Prodigy service.

So Hills has online credentials going back a decade, working on Internet brands that were among the stars of the dot-com heyday. LookSmart once was among the elite until its practices brought it low.

But things have changed since Hills took over. Traffic between January and September is up 83 percent to 5.7 million, according to comScore Media Metrix. Hills’ bets may be paying off.

Take vertical search. The San Francisco company has launched 181 sites in 13 categories like autos, cities, education, health, food, money, sports, style, music and recreation. Within those categories are sites that enable more tailored searches based on consumer demographics, supported by new ad units for advertisers.

Some of those search sites are teenja.com, a homework helper for teens; gradewinner.com for ‘tweens; 24hourscholar.com for college students; parentsurf.com for all family matters; and gobelle.com for moms on the go.

A differentiator for LookSmart is how its sites are configured. The company’s intent is to offer key information for passions, needs and repetitive tasks encountered daily. For example, visitors to a typical LookSmart site can find what they want, save what they need and share what they like. Those three functionalities are spelled out on the pages. Even registration is kept simple: only an e-mail address and password to create an account.

“I don’t believe in personalization,” Hills said. “I believe in customization — light-touch stuff.”

Such vertical sites that combine LookSmart’s crawler with its directory indicate that drill-down search is the way of the future.

“This medium is going to verticalize and fractionalize like everyone else,” Hills said. “If Google over a term of time is going to be the CBS, then I’m going to be the Turner Broadcasting System.”

Syndicating LookSmart’s technology is another growth ploy. LookSmart’s technology is supporting search engine Ask Jeeves’ AdCenter, for example.

“Over the course of time, publishers will want more direct relationships with advertisers and use networks around them to backfill,” Hills said.

Finally, there is LookSmart’s paid listings ad network. Hills “cut the company in half to get rid of fraud.” He ensured the mentality changed for good, and went public with a mea culpa for the past and a promise to maintain integrity.

“If you get a clean ad network with improving ROIs for advertisers, the cost-per-clicks will go up, and we’ll gain more external distribution,” he said.

Mickey Alam Khan covers Internet marketing campaigns and e-commerce, agency news as well as circulation for DM News and DMNews.com. To keep up with the latest developments in these areas, subscribe to our daily and weekly e-mail newsletters by visiting www.dmnews.com/newsletters

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