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Microsoft’s Bing wrests search share from Google
Final stage of Yahoo-Bing transition starts Monday
Google CEO Schmidt: Bing is Google's Main Threat
Bing and Google in a Race for Features
Microsoft Bing Now Features Facebook, Twitter and Wolfram Alpha Access

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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

 Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Wednesday, February 09, 2011 7:03:02 PM UTC ( EN | Google | internet | markets | microsoft | search | Yahoo )

Microsoft’s search engine, Bing, now has 27 percent of the search engine market and is quickly gaining on Google, according to Hitwise. Bing’s share rose by 6 percent in the month of January alone.

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The bigger news, and perhaps the underlying reason for the rise: Microsoft’s Bing might be the better search engine. Hitwise says that Google’s “success rate” is just 65 percent, compared with an 82 percent score for Bing. The success rate is the percentage of times users click on links yielded by searches.

Google is still by far the most popular search engine, with 68 percent of the market. Hitwise measures 70 other search engines, which together share 4.6 percent of the market.

ZDNet’s Larry Dignan writes that “Microsoft’s deal with Yahoo [to run Bing results in Yahoo searches] appears to be paying off.” In one sense, that’s true: Without Yahoo, Bing’s market share would be just 12.8 percent. But searches on Yahoo fell in January, from 15.2 percent of the total to 14.6 percent, while searches at Bing.com rose by 21 percent.

I fully agree with Dignan, though, when he says that Bing is increasingly looking like a threat to Google.

Source: venturebeat.com

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 Friday, October 08, 2010
Friday, October 08, 2010 5:35:40 PM UTC ( EN | internet | markets | microsoft | search | Yahoo )

Advertisements on Yahoo search will start being surfaced by Microsoft's adCenter platform starting Monday, the companies said today, marking the final major stage in transitioning Yahoo to the Bing platform.

Microsoft and Yahoo have been coaching U.S. and Canadian search advertisers on the switch, which involves advertisers moving their operations from Yahoo's outgoing Search Marketing platform to Microsoft's adCenter. As more and more ads are surfaced on Yahoo via advertisers' adCenter accounts, advertisers should notice fewer and fewer ad-clicks via their Yahoo accounts, the companies said.

The transition is expected to last from Monday until the end of October. The transition team said advertisers should make sure they've opened adCenter accounts to replace their Yahoo Search Marketing accounts no later than Oct. 25.

Beta testing for the ad-serving transition began in July, during which 7 to 10 percent of ads on Yahoo were surfaced via the Bing platform, a Yahoo spokesperson said.

The Microsoft Bing algorithms started powering Yahoo organic search results in the U.S. and Canada on Aug. 18, the spokesperson said, and the transition reportedly was complete on Aug. 24.

For more on the specifics of the Microsoft and Yahoo's revenue-sharing search deal, check out post from July 2009. Full seattlepi.com coverage of the alliance is here.

Source: http://blog.seattlepi.com

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 Monday, September 27, 2010
Monday, September 27, 2010 5:27:22 PM UTC ( EN | Google | markets | microsoft | search | Yahoo )

Microsoft’s Bing search engine is seen as the main threat to Google, not Apple nor Facebook, said the company’s chief executive officer Eric Schmidt on Friday.

Schmidt said in an interview posted online that while “Web search is not the only game in town, searching information is what it is all about.”

He said that both Apple and Facebook are well-respected competitors, but Microsoft’s fast growing search engine was the main competition for Google. “Bing is a well-run, highly competitive search engine,” he said.

“We consider neither to be a competitive threat,” Schmidt said, referring to Apple and Facebook.

Bing overtook Yahoo for the first time to become the number two search engine in the US in August, according to tracking firm The Nielsen Co.

While Bing rose to a 13.9 percent share of US search volume in August, Yahoo dropped from 14.6 percent in July to 13.1 percent in August, said Nielsen.

Although Google continues to dominate the search and advertising market with a 65.1 percent market share, Microsoft’s searches have steadily climbed from 10.7 percent in August 2009 to its current share of 13.9 percent in August 2010.

Since striking an advertising partnership in 2009, Microsoft and Yahoo are taking on a joint offensive against Google.

Last month, Microsoft began handling all Yahoo online searches in Canada and the US, and will eventually power all their Internet searches worldwide.

Google competes with Apple, but also has a partnership with the high-tech company that makes iPhones, iPads, iPods and Mac computers, Schmidt said. He resigned from the Apple board when Google dove into the smartphone market with devices running on its popular Android mobile operating system.

He said in an interview with Charlie Rose published in Business Week that a deal to have Google as the default search provider on iPhones was renewed and that the Internet firm provides mapping and other services for Apple gadgets.

Schmidt said that Apple and Google are “two companies I care a lot about” and will remain close.

Source: http://www.redorbit.com/

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 Monday, August 02, 2010
Monday, August 02, 2010 11:08:30 PM UTC ( EN | Google | internet | markets | microsoft | search )

Edwin Perello discovered that Bing, the Microsoft search engine, could find addresses in his rural Indiana town when Google could not. Laura Michelson, an administrative assistant in San Francisco, was lured by Bing’s flight fare tracker. Paul Callan, a photography buff in Chicago, fell for Bing’s vivid background images.

Like most Americans, they still use Google as their main search tool. But more often, they find themselves navigating to Microsoft’s year-old Bing for certain tasks, and sometimes they stay a while.

“I was a Google user before, but the more I used Bing the more I liked it,” Mr. Callan said. “It’s more like muscle memory takes me to Google.”

Bing still handles a small slice of Web searches in the United States, 12.7 percent in June, compared with Google’s 62.6 percent, as measured by comScore, the Web analytics firm. But Bing’s share has been growing, as has Yahoo’s, while Google’s has been shrinking.



And while no one argues that Google’s dominance is in immediate jeopardy, Google is watching Microsoft closely, mimicking some of Bing’s innovations — like its travel search engine, its ability to tie more tools to social networking sites and its image search — or buying start-ups to help it do so in the future.

Google has even taken on some of Bing’s distinctive look, like giving people the option of a Bing-like colorful background, and the placement of navigation tools on the left-hand side of the page.


When Microsoft introduced it last year, Bing made a splash with its vivid background images.
In June, Google presented searchers the option of a colorful background rather than the stark, white page.

The result is a renaissance in search, resulting in more sophisticated tools for consumers who want richer answers to complex questions than the standard litany of blue links.

The competition is a remarkable and surprising twist: Microsoft, knocked around for so long as a bumbling laggard, has given the innovative upstart Google a kick in the pants. As the search engines introduce feature after competing feature, some analysts say they have set off an arms race, with the companies poised to spend whatever it takes to win the second phase of Web search.

“There is a cold war going on,” said Sandeep Aggarwal, senior Internet and software analyst at Caris & Company, who watches both companies. “Clearly, you can see how Bing’s competition is forcing Google to try and catch up in some places.”

Google officials agree there is more competition, but say they are not simply reacting to the younger search engine.

Google’s new features have not been in response to Bing, said Marissa Mayer, the company’s vice president for search products and user experience. “A lot of these things have been in the works for a long time,” she said. “Left-hand navigation we worked on for almost two years. We wanted to make sure we had it exactly right.”

Microsoft’s gains are far from staggering. Its share of searches has grown to 12.7 percent, from 8 percent, since Bing was introduced in May 2009, and Yahoo, which has a search deal with Microsoft, still handles a larger share of searches than Bing. And in the newest search frontier, mobile devices, Google has even more market share than on the Web at large.

Still, Bing’s gains have impressed analysts, who have watched Google fend off repeated assaults on its lucrative search and ad business, which accounts for some 95 percent of its revenue.

Building a more comprehensive, faster and more accurate search engine than Google is a daunting challenge, and a long list of big companies and start-ups have failed in their attempts. Microsoft endured plenty of ribbing as it spent years building and then scrapping search systems meant to help it compete against Google. But it kept experimenting until it found a way.

Microsoft has spent billions of dollars building the computing centers needed to power search and advertising systems and acquiring start-ups with niche expertise. In addition, it has thrown money at consumers, through cash-back programs on purchases, and at partners willing to promote Bing ahead of Google. Over the last year, Microsoft’s online services division lost $2.36 billion on revenue of $2.2 billion.

With Bing, Microsoft has tried to attract people like Mr. Callan by excelling at answering frequently asked questions, like those related to travel, health, shopping, entertainment and local businesses. For example, Bing has flight search and prediction tools that reveal price fluctuations for certain routes, and advises customers whether to buy or wait. Bing Health uses data from sources like the Mayo Clinic and Healthwise.

The hope is that “somebody would come back just for that and then, down the line, they would do other types of searches, too,” said Danny Sullivan, a longtime industry analyst and editor in chief of the blog Search Engine Land.

People do not always want to click on links and dig through pages to hunt out information, so when Bing started in May 2009, it pulled relevant information and stuck it on the top and left-hand side of the results pages. Search “Angelina Jolie,” for instance, and see a slide show and a list of her movies on top and related links on the side.

“We said, ‘Let’s change the entire way we lay out pages,’ ” said Yusuf Mehdi, a senior vice president for Microsoft’s online audiences business. “We will not be shackled by blue links.”

Google, meanwhile, has quietly introduced its own new features that have in several instances looked a lot like Bing’s.

For example, in May, it too added the left-hand navigation tools — though Ms. Mayer of Google pointed out that many of the tools had already been available, just not easily visible from the search page.

“Certainly there’s been increased competition in the space,” Ms. Mayer said of Bing. “When there’s more competition, everyone’s search gets better, that serves the users a lot better.”

Bing’s travel tool uses technology from Farecast, which Microsoft bought in early 2008. In July, Google announced plans to acquire ITA Software for $700 million; ITA makes the same comparison shopping software for flights that Bing’s Farecast uses.

Then there is the look of the main search pages for each site. Microsoft has argued that the vivid images ever-present behind the Bing search box have helped its appeal; young people and women have shown a particular fondness for Bing. In June, Google offered people the option to have a colorful background image like the Golden Gate Bridge on its main search page rather than the stark, white page that helped make Google famous.

Google has also played catch-up to Microsoft in offering ways to search for and digest more images in one go, and has trailed in adding some tie-ins to social networking sites.

“Google’s new innovations have come at a slower pace,” Mr. Aggarwal said. “There was no one challenging Google until Microsoft decided it was a business they would not give up.”

Still, Mr. Sullivan and other analysts also say Google has been making many significant but subtle behind-the-scenes changes that make it better at responding to obscure and complex queries. Google made 500 tweaks to its secret search algorithm last year and introduced personalized search, which customizes results based on what users frequently click on.

Google executives often chide Microsoft that it overengineers software like Office and bombards people with needless features. But now Google has swapped its clean, simple approach to search in favor of a feature war with Microsoft.

“Google seems to do things because Bing has done something,” Mr. Sullivan said. “It’s a kind of knee-jerk thing — we have to do this product now because we don’t want people to think we’re weak.”

Source: http://www.nytimes.com

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 Friday, November 13, 2009
Friday, November 13, 2009 7:54:39 PM UTC ( EN | internet | microsoft | search )

Microsoft announced a broad range of new functionality for Bing, its search engine, on Nov. 11. In addition to incorporating results from Wolfram Alpha, a "computational engine" that provides a definitive numerical answer to a search query, the revamped Bing offers a more robust video page—with feeds from MSN Video, Hulu, and ABC—and more intensive search in categories such as local events and cities.

In a sign of the increased importance of social networking to corporations such as Microsoft and Google, Bing has also incorporated Facebook and Twitter into its search features.

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