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?


Google Dominates Search Market Where Competitors Are Too Tiny To Be David!

July 29, 2010

When you talk about dominance, numbers speak louder than pages of reports written. Google, the name itself defines a Goliath in the search market and latest numbers seal its reputation. The search giant shares a gargantuan 90.5% of the market share and an even mind boggling 98.29% mobile search market share.

The numbers leave very less for the competitors in the arena, which includes Yahoo, Bing and others less notable search providers. the numbers are as follows for others:

Yahoo: 3.91% Search Market Share – and 0.8% Mobile search market share.

Microsoft Bing: 3.74% Search Market- and 0.46% Mobile search Share

The graph explains a whole lot more than I can ever express: an absolute dominance of Google over everyone else. The data compiled by Pingdom takes both the non-mobile search and the mobile search shares and the red bar isn’t the summed up data of both.

What is to learn for others here? First and foremost: you can’t beat Google, not now and not in the future. The reason for this superiority? Early adoption and emphasis on one category: search, you won’t find Google trying interactive pages, awesome background pictures, integrating all sorts of useless stuff on the main search page and making Google.com a destination/portal. That is exactly what people have loved about it, when they visit Google they are sure of doing what they are on the site for: Search unlike Yahoo for once. I can’t recall when was the last time I visited Yahoo.com for anything? It is flooded with all sorts of crap and search is just one aspect of it.

All in all, Google and search are synonymous to each other and despite all sorts of [legal] troubles Google has been into, it has been the best with what it started off with; plain old search.


The New Yahoo? An Information Destination!

August 24, 2009
Yahoos new chief marketing officer Elisa Steele explains the new Yahoo

Yahoo's new chief marketing officer Elisa Steele explains the new changes at Yahoo

After several months of soul searching, we finally know what the new Yahoo is all about: its not a search engine, or a webmail, or a chat service… it’s an information destination!

New slogan, old theme

Sounds familiar, right? Although the slogan is different, ”connecting you to what matters most,” the new Yahoo feels more of the same, albeit with less Web properties (photos, videos, web hosting, etc… were all shutdown) and focusing instead on its communication tools, like Mail and Messenger, and adding a layer of social-ness to what’s left!

Follows a video excerpt from today’s media event in Sunnyvale, Calif., where Yahoo’s Chief Marketing Officer Elisa Steele tried to explain what the new Yahoo really is!


Yahoo Search Will Compete With Microsoft Bing; Is Not Dead!

August 24, 2009
Yahoo’s senior vice president of Labs and Search strategy Prabhakar Raghavan kept his cool answering questions about how Yahoo will compete with Microsoft Bing

Yahoo’s senior vice president of Labs and Search strategy Prabhakar Raghavan kept his cool answering questions about how Yahoo will compete with Microsoft Bing

At a media event today, Yahoo went to great length to convince reporters that its search engine is here to stay despite the recent search deal with Microsoft.

For Yahoo’s senior vice president of Labs and Search strategy Prabhakar Raghavan, the Sunnyvale, Calif., Internet company is giving up the “megawatt” war of crawling and indexing the Web – which duty now goes to Microsoft – to focus on competing for the “front end experience.”

“The battle has moved beyond the crawling and indexing,” Raghavan said.

Yahoo: We’re not a version of Bing!

An answer that obviously did not satisfy the media in attendance (AFP, AP, Bloomberg News, Cnet, Forbes, Internet.com, Investor’s Business Daily, Reuters and The French News Agency), who were still pondering why Yahoo did this deal with Microsoft!

In the yet-to-be-approved search deal, Microsoft will be providing  “algorithmic” Web search results, images and video, to user queries, as well as “search triggered advertising” also known as sponsored search.

“From these results, what we do with it, how we paint it, how we render it, what we measure, that’s entirely up to us… We maintain the user experience,” insist Raghavan.

However, Yahoo will be responsible for selling the “display ads” for both Microsoft and Yahoo, as well as improve the user experience of Yahoo search with some of the new features announced today.

“It’s a little of a give and take on both side. It’s complex deal. This is unfortunately not something as simple as an outright acquisition. It’s not ‘we took a division here and plant it in Redmond’. And a great deal of deliberation went into this deal,” added Raghavan.

Here’s a video excerpt in which Raghavan explains how Yahoo search and Microsoft Bing are different, independent and competitors:


Twine 2.0 To Launch This Year In Bid For Semantic Web

August 11, 2009

Nova Spivack likes to say the value of online search is leveling off.

The keyword-based, link-prioritized system run by the likes of Google is not keeping up with the growth and complexity of the Internet, says this CEO of Radar Networks

When a search returns millions of responses, it approaches the point of being unwieldy. “The challenge is now how do we save search.”

The Web will become a giant database, says Radar Networks Nova Spivack

The Web will become a giant database, says Radar Network's Nova Spivack

Spivack’s answer – Twine 2.0 – will launch by the end of the year and has broad ambitions of bringing new intelligence to the Internet. Twine 1.0 has up to 2 million monthly users and lets people manually add bookmarks to pages that Twine then converts to “tags” to better explain the content to others.

Twine 2.0 will automate the process (applying metadata tags, or descriptions) across the entire Web.

The Web will become in essence a giant database, where pages will be better understood and information more easily found, says Spivack. He said during a presentation Tuesday afternoon at the Search Engine Strategies conference that the company had not previously disclosed its plans.

At the same time, he acknowledged the enormity of the task. “The project is probably too ambitious for a company of our size,” says Spivack. That’s why he is seeking partnership with some of the large search companies he hopes to put on the defensive.


Search Engines See Search Competition From Social Networking

August 11, 2009

Online search is a splintering market, and social networking appears to be a big reason why.

Three billion searches are conducted each month on You Tube and a billion are launched on Facebook. Twitter is getting its share.

So how is a traditional search engine going to remain relevant?  Search engines are spending a great deal of effort better understanding the intent of searchers and figuring out how to deliver better results.

People search for events on Twitter and for people on Facebook, says Hitwises Heather Dougherty

People search for events on Twitter and for people on Facebook, says Hitwise's Heather Dougherty

All things equal, they probably produce the best results.

But social sites are having success in special niches. For instance, a lot of Facebook searches are for people, according to Heather Dougherty, direct of research at Hitwise. This would make sense since it a network connecting people.

LinkedIn attracts business searches and Twitter sees “a lot of event-driven searches and people-driven searches,” Dougherty said Tuesday at the Search Engine Strategies conference in San Jose.

The Iran election was one such event. “Real-time search will have a strong impact,” she said.

In this changing environment, searchers engines better keep looking over their shoulders. Users could find they turn elsewhere depending on the information they seek.


Baidu Giving Google Fits In China

August 3, 2009

Baidu, the upstart Chinese search engine, is giving Google a run for its money in the world’s most populous country.

In June, the 9-year-old company passed Google in market share for the first time, riding a head of stream.

Baidu edges out Google in China, according to Net Applications (Baidu share in blue)

Baidu edges out Google in China, according to Net Applications (Baidu share in blue)

The switch in leadership illustrates how intense of a two-horse race the Chinese market has become. Yahoo trails in a very distant third place.

According to Net Applications, Baidu had 51 percent of the market at the end of the month compared with Google’s 44 percent. Yahoo had 1.6 percent and Microsoft, less 0.9 percent.

“Baidu is on a major growth curve” and benefiting as Chinese users migrate from Google, Net Applications says.

Baidu now accounts for 9 percent of global search usage (topping Microsoft). It will prove a formidable foe for Google.


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.


Consolidation Begins In Online Ad Market As Adknowledge Buys Super Rewards

July 22, 2009

Adknowledge hopes to open up a new chapter of the online advertising market with its purchase of Super Rewards, a deal it announced Wednesday.

Its a new way to think about advertising, says Adknowledges Scott Lynn

"It's a new way to think about advertising," says Adknowledge's Scott Lynn

No financial terms were released. However, the transaction appears to be many times larger than any of Adknowledge’s previous takeovers. The company has made five acquisitions in two years recently buying the media division of MIVA for $11.6 million.

The deal pairs a more tradition approach to online advertising – Adknowledge runs a network for placing display, or banner, ads and positions itself as an alternative to Google or Yahoo – with Super Rewards’ focus on virtual currencies.

“It’s a new way to think about advertising,’ says Adknowledge CEO Scott Lynn.

The combination of the two will likely create a formidable competitor and one that will be closely watched. Virtual currency is already a $600 million market in the U.S. and has been growing at a 600 percent pace, according to some estimates. “It is clearly not a fad,” says Lynn.

As the largest virtual currency company, Super Rewards, a division of KITN Media, has said it will generate about $100 million in revenue this year. Adknowledge will have revenue in excess of $250 million.

The company offers its currency to developers of online games and applications on social networks, such as Facebook and MySpace. Consumers earn it by signing up for advertised offers and then redeem it for virtual goods and services in the games they play.

The deal could indeed be a trendsetter. With virtual goods a new bright spot in the social advertising market, other firms will look at ways to respond and capitalize for themselves.

The could make Super Rewards competitors hot properties.


Users Of Online Search Becoming More Sophisticated

July 17, 2009

Most of the buzz in the online search space has been about Bing, Microsoft’s new search engine.

The improvements in Bing, or so the common wisdom goes, will help Microsoft better compete with market leader Google.

Search queries are becoming more complex and longer, says Google

Search queries are becoming more complex and longer, says Google

But the praise being heaped on Bing may be diverting attention from an even more important industry development: that search users are becoming rapidly more sophisticated, and engines of all types are having a difficult time keeping up.

So far the Bing magic hasn’t played out in the market. According to comScore, Bing did give Microsoft a modest boost in the June rankings. Its market share grew 0.4 points to 8.4 percent. But the gain came entirely from Yahoo, not Google.

Google held its own, with its share unchanged at 65 percent. Yahoo slumped 0.5 points to a 19.6 percent share.

That may have something to do with growing consumer expectations. On a conference call Thursday evening, Google Senior Vice President Jonathan Rosenberg said the company has noticed power users are running more complex searches with longer queries and higher expectations.

He said Google has tried to respond with its new options feature.  But much more needs to be done in the realm of adding personalization and intelligence to search responses.

“Search is still an unsolved problem,” says Google CEO Eric Schmidt.  So running hard with new products is a little like standing in place. The target keeps moving.


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