Microsoft Plays The CryBaby While Google And Yahoo Japan Zip A Deal

July 30, 2010

Remember how Microsoft rejoiced having a deal with Yahoo USA last year after all the brouhaha? Its desperate attempt to become a minor number two in the search market competing with Google. Almost everyone was after Google like a pack of wolves to ensure the search giant wouldn’t sniff a deal with Yahoo and it continues to date. At least with Microsoft.

Google has struck an advertising deal with Yahoo Japan and that is hurting Microsoft. Why? I think don’t need to elaborate and my post yesterday on Google’s absolute dominance of the Search Market. With Google signing this deal, it would further solidify its position [though it really doesn’t need this]. However it would greatly benefit Yahoo, given that it will be leveraging Google’s dominance in both search and the ad market and it will most definitely not harm the Microsoft – Yahoo partnership but the Redmond, Washington based software provider has all the issues and things to worry about. A couple of those are:

It will severely damage a healthy competition for search

Google would become the dominant supplier of Ads in Japan for an indefinite period

These can be legitimate concerns but we have seen that Japan’s Fair Trade Commission has given a green signal to this deal. This is unlike the troubles Google faced when the Justice Department called the Yahoo – Google partnership in the US to be anti-competitive. That is just a tale Microsoft would continue to cry over given it has failed itself at search and what ever little respect it could have mustered by cementing a more global partnership with Yahoo. Yahoo Japan on the other hand is steering clear of the fight between number 1 and number 3 in search business stating that Yahoo will use Google’s search technology but would keep its advertising business separate.

I feel a bit sorry for Microsoft though, the heads must be cursing a missed opportunity and being outmaneuvered by Google. Can’t Google give in a small percentage of search share to Microsoft, as charity?


Is Google Set To Fail In China?

July 24, 2010

Google might be firing at all cylinders when it comes to gargantuan search shares. But in China, the search giant has some problems, losing out to the dominant local engine, Baidu. The figures state that Google’s search share fell from its previous 71.1 percent to 69.7 percent [source], a huge plunge given that the duration for that drop was only three months.

All that affect has primarily come due to its failure to get a grip in China, a massive Internet market, which if summed up, hasn’t been successfully tapped by anyone from the West. Google, is no exception. In my opinion, the search market, or any other as a matter of fact is on the verge or has reached saturation and 71.1 percent was the maximum Google would have reached. However the much newer and rapidly expanding Asian markets are still untapped and the Silicon Valley is finding it nearly impossible to penetrate these. At least China for sure, of course the country has a huge firewall all around it which ensures that the only thing that gets through is what the ruling body thinks should otherwise there is a huge Block ready to keep you out.

Baidu currently holds 4.6 percent in the global search market, which is just shy of Microsoft with 4.8 percent and Yahoo with 5.6 percent.

Of course Google is still the most popular search destination for anyone online,but its recent tactics to deal with the strict censorship in China have to a large extent backfired. That included the termination of Google.cn earlier this year as well as threatening to pull out of China. If I were Google, I wouldn’t do that for the huge market it is. Lets say if only half of the 1.3 billion people in China have access online in the next couple of years and all they have is Baidu, I bet Google’s dominant position would be challenged big time.

Well it will at least be zeroed out in China for all times to come.


Sources Say Microsoft And Yahoo To Announce Search Deal On Wednesday

July 28, 2009

Microsoft and Yahoo appeared poised to announce a long anticipated search deal on Wednesday, the culmination of months of on-and-off talks over a partnership, sources say.

Details of the arrangement were sparse. But an agreement between the two companies seemed to have been reached.

The companies have been haggling over a search deal since Yahoo rejected Microsoft’s merger bid last year. According to The Wall Street Journal, the pact would require Yahoo to use Microsoft;s new search engine, Bing.

But Yahoo would be responsible for selling search advertising on its site and some Microsoft sites.

Buzz about a possible deal has intensified in the past couple weeks.


Bing Sees Traffic Growth But Are The Search Gains At Microsoft Temporary

June 17, 2009

Microsoft’s new Bing search engine continues to attract new search traffic to the company.

Bing sees a traffic bounce for a second week

Bing sees a traffic bounce for a second week

But is that traffic boost temporary or permanent? So far the early data suggests the interest in the search engine is persisting.

According to comScore, Microsoft’s share of the U.S. online search market rose to 12.1 percent for the work week ending June 12.

This is up from 9.1 percent at the end of May, before Bing’s launch two weeks ago.

Last week’s traffic showed an increase over the search engine’s first week of operation, when it captured an 11.1 percent market share.

Google is the leader in the market with more than 60 percent of search queries.

Microsoft executives must so far be pleased with the introduction. But they will be watching the share numbers for the coming weeks closely to see how much of the traffic is due to initial experimentation.


Google Lets Users Slice, Dice Search Results

May 12, 2009

Google’s Search Option panel is for me the most important announcement made today at the company’s Searchology press conference at the GooglePlex.

Available as of today on the Mountain View, Calif.- company’s Web and Images search engines, the search option panel – that appears on the left hand side of the screen after clicking on the “show options” link at the top of the search results page – lets users slice, dice and filter results in a few clicks: by content (video, forum, reviews), by date (day, week, year and even a timeline), display image stamps right on the results page and the cool Wonder Wheel!

The Wonder Wheel feature is a visual way to look at search results. The Flash-based interactive application starts with the searched keyword in the center, and related terms around it. Clicking on one of the related term puts it in the center of the circle, etc… Reminds me of the “social graph” Altavista launched in the late 90s!

Google also announced two other anecdotal products: Google Squared, which extracts information (details, values…) from a search result and present it in a spreadsheet form (available in Google Labs in a couple weeks); and Rich Snippets, which shows extra metadata in a search result’s preview text just below the URL to help users make more informed clicks.

This is the second Searchology event organized to update Google users, partners, and customers on the progress made in search and launch new features. At the first Searchology, two years ago, Google launched Universal Search, a feature that blended results of different types (web pages, images, videos, books, etc.) on the results page.

Here’s a Google video on the Search Option panel:


Newspapers Missing The Online Opportunities Of Social Media

March 25, 2009

Here are some of the more intelligent recommendations I have seen recently for the troubled newspaper industry.

Why not let readers Tweet stories they like?

Why not let readers Tweet stories they like?

Most local newspapers are notoriously bad at harnessing the power of the Internet to rescue their ailing old-line businesses. But the tools to reverse this are available in the latest wave of social media Web sites and search tools – including Twitter, according to Gartner.

And the benefits might be considerable.

Newspapers are clearly suffering. Many metropolitan dailies are hanging by threads, with advertising revenue falling 10 percent or 20 percent or more a month, and several cites, such as San Francisco and Philadelphia, likely to go dark.

But newspapers aren’t harnessing the power for this most important asset: loyal readers.

In a survey late last year, Gartner found about 49 percent of respondents in the U.S., U.K. and Italy use search engines once a week or more to find content. But only 20 percent use search tools built into a newspaper or magazine site.

So why not improve those tools and make them more prominent on newspaper Web sites?

Many newspapers similarly list their staffers who are on the influential microblogging  site Twitter, but few offer Twitter users the ability to “tweet” stories from their Web sites, says Gartner.

In a similar vien, 24 percent of those surveyed said they share good content with friends via personal communications, such as e-mail and instant messaging. But how many newspapers: think of this as a major source of distribution?

All these ideas are worth considering in a desperate environment.


Yahoo Removes Main Stumbling Block To Search Deal With Microsoft

March 9, 2009

A deal with Microsoft can finally go ahead with Yahoo's investors and management blessing

A deal with Microsoft can finally go ahead with Yahoo's investors and management blessing

On Friday, a Delaware judge approved changes to Yahoo’s employees severance plan, making a buyout by Microsoft or others easier.

These changes revert amemdments made last year – compensating workers in case their jobs were eliminated or altered after a change in control of Yahoo – which would have added $1 billion in cost to anyone buying Yahoo, and effectively acting as a “poising pill.”

The settlement now removes the last major stumbling block to Microsoft acquiring Yahoo’s search engine.


Who Knew? Top Searches On You Tube Seek Songs, Bands And Music Info

January 29, 2009

You Tube has become a major search destination on the Web for music-related topics such as bands, songs and artists.

Fred was among the top December searches on You Tube

Fred was among the top December searches on You Tube

Music-related searches dominate the site, said Hitwise in a first-time study of search on Google’s popular video vault.

Following music were queries for Internet personalities, a category Hitwise labeled miscellaneous and television searches.

However, search interest on the site was concentrated. The top 50 search terms accounted for 20 percent of the site’s total search volume in December.

The top search during the month was for rapper Lil Wayne, followed by Twilight, Beyonce, Single Ladies, Souja Bay, Chris Brown and Fred. Hot!


Bartz Says She Has No Plans To Sell Yahoo But Leaves Open Search Sale

January 27, 2009

New CEO Carol Bartz said she didn’t join Yahoo two weeks ago to sell the company.

Yahoo is the best information site on the Web, says Carol Bartz

Yahoo is the best information site on the Web, says Carol Bartz

But she wasn’t as firm about the company’s search business, which has had trouble competing with Google search.

Bartz offered these and several other early insight on Yahoo during a fourth-quarter conference call where the company announced a 1 percent revenue decline and a $303 million net loss.

Yahoo is the “best information site on the Internet,” she said, and that is where its focus should focus be. It’s top properties, incuding its home page, Yahoo Finance and Yahoo News, are keys to keeping people coming for content, she added.

But so are planned new products, which she declined to discuss. “Things will be rolling out as I start to understand them,” she said.

But Bartz insisted that unloading the company was not in the cards. “Did I come to Yahoo to sell the company?” she asked.  “The answer is no.”

Minutes later she elaborated: “This is a fantastic Internet property. It really doesn’t deserve everybody trying to pick and pull it apart.”

But she was less steadfast about Yahoo Search. Search is a valuable part of Yahoo’s business because of what it says about user intentions, she said. And with quality improvements in the past year, its share has stabilized since the third quarter, she added.

The company needs to continue to improve search whether it goes up for sale or not, she said, but “I didn’t arrive here with preconceived notions about anything.”

Bartz said her biggest concern at Yahoo was that “this organization is very complex, therefore it’s hard for people to get speedy answers and make decision.”

It is a problem can be addressed, she added.


The Most Popular Google Search Terms Of 2008

December 2, 2008

Here are the search terms with the greatest growth in usage over the past year. No great surprises here, except maybe SurfTheChannel.

“We combed through billions of anonymous, aggregated search queries to bring you this snapshot of what’s been top-of-mind for Americans,” says Google.

1.    Obama
2.    Facebook
3.    Att
4.    iPhone
5.    YouTube
6.    Fox News
7.    Palin
8.    Beijing 2008
9.    David Cook
10.  SurfTheChannel


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