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Microsoft’s announcement this week that it would offer rebates for purchases made through its search engine is shaking the E-Commerce world. But the very lengthy list of gotchas—including making consumers wait potentially 11 weeks after purchases before seeing the rebate checks—is raising questions about whether this approach will work. The idea of offering consumers financial bribes if they use a particular search engine has been tried before, without success. But Microsoft’s entry into this field—the latest in a series of Redmond gambits to try and breathe life into its search engine—is different from earlier efforts. Read more. |
May 23rd, 2008 at 3:08 pm
Evan,
I agree with your summation..last paragraph..the instant rebate idea.. Maybe your on to something.. We have been on jellyfish since the very beggining. Not too much action there except for the smack shopping deals..We will wait and se..
May 27th, 2008 at 10:21 am
This program ties a property that MS recently purchased, Jellyfish, with Live Search. Sites that offer slow but automatic rebates have been around for several years (eBates and FatWallet, for example) and Jellyfish has been offering the program, complete with search functionality, for almost two years. The biggest drawback to date has been the overall weakness of the search engine. Hopefully, MS can fix that part.