Google’s U.S. Search Share Reaches New High and Microsoft Reaches 2 Year Low in June

Nielsen Online yesterday its rankings of U.S. search share for June, with overall search increasing 27.0 percent year over year to 10 billion searches. Google had a year over year increase of 42.1 percent and received 66.1 percent of searches. Google’s had it highest percentage of searches ever, surpassing March of this year when it received 64.2 percent. Yahoo had a year over year increase of 24 percent and received 16.2 percent of searches. Microsoft had a year over year decrease of 20.7 percent and received 8.8 percent of searches. Microsoft’s percentage of searches was it lowest in the last two years despite the launch of the rebranding of their search engine as Bing at the beginning of the month.

Yahoo and Microsoft Reach Search and Ad Deal

Microsoft and Yahoo today announced they had reached a deal to form a search and advertising partnership.  Under the partnership, Microsoft’s Bing search engine will power Yahoo Search and Microsoft’s AdCenter search advertising service will provide search ads to Yahoo Search for 10 years. The deal increases the reach of Microsoft search engine and search advertising service. Nielsen Online reported that in May Microsoft had 9.4 percent of U.S. searches and Yahoo had 17.2 percent of searches. While larger, the combined percentage is only 26.6 which is not even half of Google’s 63.2 percentage for the month.  The companies indicated that they are “hopeful” that the deal will close, after possible regulatory review, in early 2010. Officials from the companies told CNET News that they expect “integrating Bing’s results into Yahoo in the U.S. will take several months” and that moving to AdCenter “could take a year”. The companies expect that full integration would occur within 24 months. The deal did not include a merger of the two companies display advertising businesses. The deal follows on an of talks about some type of agreement between the two companies that began with a hostile takeover offer by Microsoft early last year.

Microsoft Claims Increase In Users Following Bing Launch

Microsoft has reported that they saw an 8 percent increase in unique users for their search engine during the month of June. At the beginning of the month Microsoft launched an update of the search engine and rebranded it as Bing. Microsoft also reported that in their own polling the number of people “likely to recommend” their search engine double during the month.  The increase is not unexpected due the press coverage of the rebranding and the advertising campaign for the search engine that also began at the begging of the month. In the past Microsoft has made similar increases, but has been unable to sustain them.

May U.S. Search Share Results

Nielsen Online has released its rankings of U.S. search share for May (PDF). Overall search increased 20.3 percent year over year to 9.4 billion searches. Google had year over year increase of 28.2 percent and received 63.2 percent of searches. Yahoo had a year over year increase of 22.3 percent and received 17.2 percent of searches. Microsoft had a year over year decrease of 14.6 percent and received 9.4 percent of searches.

Bing Launch Increases Microsoft’s Search Activity

Comscore today released preliminary data that shows that Microsoft’s search activity in the United Sates has increased following the release of Bing. From June 2 to June 6 Microsoft’s share of search was 11.1 percent up 2 percentage points from May 26 to May 30, according to Comscore. During the same periods the amount the average daily amount of searchers who used Bing increased 1.7 percentage points to 15.5 percent. Bing started to become available on June 1 and officially launched on June 3. Comscore also indicated that the increase “held relatively steady” during the measured period. The gains are not unexpected, due to attention the launch has received and Microsoft’s advertising campaign.

Microsoft Begins U.S. Television Campaign for Bing

Microsoft will begin a U.S. television campaign this evening to promote Bing, which was also officially launched today. The first ad will promote that users currently experience “search overload,” getting too much information and not the answers they need. Several weeks later a second set of ads will begin running which will dramatize “what it would be like if people had to talk to their partners or friends the way they do to a search engine” according to a News.com article. News.com also reports that next month Microsoft begin running ads that promote specific types of searches, such as travel search and that Microsoft will also be promoted Bing with online ads. Microsoft has been reported to be spending around $100 million on the ad campaign.

Google Shares Local Search Data With Listed Businesses

Google has announced that businesses will be able to see data on how users are interacting the listing for their location(s) in Google Maps and Google Search. The data includes how many times listing in appeared in a Google Search or Google Maps Search, how many times users interacted with the listing, what queries lead searchers to the listing, and, when users request direction to a location, the zip code of their starting location. The type of interactions that Google provides data are clicking for more info on Google Maps, driving directions, and clicking on the link to businesses’ website. The data, which can be displayed for specified date ranges, is available in Google’s Local Business Center. Data is currently available for the last month and new data will be added daily. Google already provides search data for websites through their Webmaster Tools. Businesses that are not already signed up for the Local Business Center, can claim their location or, if the are not already listed, add their location at http://www.google.com/lbc.

Microsoft’s Bing Search Engine is Now Available

Microsoft’s updated and renamed search engine Bing, formerly Live Search, is now accessible to the public at http://www.bing.com/. Microsoft has also begun to redirect live.com and searches from MSN to Bing. In addition to the more visible changes, which you can find out more about at http://www.discoverbing.com/, Microsoft has made changes behind the scenes. For example, previously the search engine did not handle 301 redirects set to deal with www. vs non-www. URL canonicalization for a website’s home page, while handling it for other pages on the same website. That has now been fixed.

Microsoft Announces Rebranding of Live Search as Bing

Microsoft today announced the rebranding of and update to the Live Search search engine. The update has been in testing under the name codename Kumo since late last year. Live Search was given the new name Bing, in a post on Live Search blog Microsoft explains why Bing was chosen:

We needed a brand that was as fresh and new as our approach. It needed to be like the product — optimized for the Internet. A name that was memorable, short, easy to spell, and that would function well as a URL around the world. We like Bing because it sounds off in our heads when we think about that moment of discovery and decision making — when you resolve those important tasks. And frankly, the name needed to clearly communicate that this is something new, to invite you to come back, to re-introduce you to our new and improved service and encourage you to give it a try.

As part of the rebranding is touting Bing as a “decision engine” as opposed to a search engine. Saying that Bing begins to move past experience of using a search engine to “a new approach to user experience and intuitive tools to help customers make better decisions.” Microsoft says that it is four areas of focus for making better decisions will be “making a purchase decision, planning a trip, researching a health condition or finding a local business.”

The update introduces new features to the search results page interface. On left side of the page a pane will show options to refine searches, including switching between different types of searches and related searches. To try to help users find quickly find result their looking for there is Best Match where the best answer is “surfaced and called out”, Quick Preview which is an overlay “that expands over a search result caption to provide a better sense of the related site’s relevancy”, and Instant Answers that is “designed to provide the sought-after information within the body of the search results page”

According to Microsoft, Bing “will begin to roll out over the coming days and will be fully deployed worldwide on Wednesday, June 3.”

Microsoft will also be launching advertising campaign, reported to be around 100 million dollars, to promote the rebranding. Despite Microsoft’s lofty talk about the update and the advertising campaign, Microsoft does not expect much change in its share of searches any time soon. Steve Ballmer told the New York Times that he hoped that “over the next year we’ll see small results. Big as a percentage of our share, and small as a percentage maybe of Google’s share.” Microsoft search boss Satya Nadella told CNET that if Microsoft share “were to go from 9 percent share to 11 percent by next year, he would consider that a success.” For some time Microsoft’s share has fluctuated significantly, with it share being as high 14.1 percent and as low as 9.1 in the last year according to Nielsen Online.

The Bing rebranding will also occur for a number of related services, including the mapping service Virtual Earth being renamed Bing Maps for Enterprise. There will also be unspecified improvements to Live Search Webmaster Center as part of the rebranding. according to a post on the Live Search Webmaster Center Blog.

Microsoft To Reduce Cloaking Detection Checks from MSNBot

In a post on the Live Search Webmaster Central Blog it was announced that Microsoft has released a patch for their cloaking detector that “should significantly reduce the number of requests to a more acceptable rate.” The cloaking detector, which is an part of Live Search’s MSNBot crawler, checks to see if websites are providing different content to visitors than the provide to MSNBot to “weed out spammers”. The cloaking detector mimics a visitor coming to a webpage from the Live search engine. There has been a problem with detector causing it has been unnecessarily performing hundreds of checks a day on some websites, which uses server resources and fills website statistics with fake referrers. Due to similar problems Microsoft announced that it would make changes to the detector in December of 2007.

Microsoft also said the cloaking detector problem was “compounded by and also confused with” a new feed crawling function that was “overzealous in its attempt to crawl and provide up-to-the-minute results” and that a patch was released for the feed crawler. The new feed crawler is intended to “help provide fresh results” in Live Search. As part of the post Microsoft has asked webmasters to help them to discover content changes, saying:

You can do this via sitemaps and various meta properties per link or via RSS link to notify us about very important content. To prevent us from having to monitor lots of feeds often, we recommend aggregating content change onto a few feeds; adding the name, “Aggregate” somewhere in the feed name. We also suggest referring to them in robots.txt and your sitemap—both of which will help us detect them and their use.