Number 237 - February 2003

Google's Froogle is New Way to Sort Products on Internet
By Leslie Walker, The Washington Post via Dec 20 Seattle PI
   Shoppers have a new Internet tool: Froogle, launched last week as part of the Google search service.

   Froogle (www.froogle.google.com) offers a price-minded glimpse of Google's vast Web index. Browse by category--apparel, computers, flowers, whatever--or enter a query term, and it will present a list of matching products, each with a thumbnail image on the left and description, price and retailer on the right.

   "This was in response to users who told us they wanted a better way to search for products," said Google spokeswoman Eileen Rodriguez.

   Rodriguez said Froogle differs from other comparison-shopping sites by being more product-focused. It does not allow merchants to pay for favorable placement. Ads appear only in the right-side margin of a page, in the same text-only style as the ads on Google's regular search pages.
   Froogle's product index is created in two ways. Google's software "spider" identifies product pages at online stores as it crawls the Web. Froogle invites merchants to upload their product lists directly. It then uses the same mathematical formula to rank product pages that it uses to determine the relevance of the 3 billion Google Web pages.

   While Froogle lets users narrow search results by price or category, it presents no editorial reviews of products or merchants, Nor does it display taxes and shipping fees--features offered by top comparison-shopping services such as DealTime, BizRate and MySimon--let alone rank results by lowest price.

   "These are key pieces of information when you are trying to make a purchasing decision," said Daniel T. Ciporin, chief executive of DealTime (www.dealtime.com). Rodriguez said Froogle is in its early stage of testing and will acquire more features later.
  Number 237 - February 2003