Comments on: Google up, Microsoft down in November Web searches
Web searches rise again for Google in November and drop again for Microsoft as U.S. searches overall increase, Nielsen says.
Web searches rise again for Google in November and drop again for Microsoft as U.S. searches overall increase, Nielsen says.
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Microsoft isn't because it has spent too much of its resources on Windows and other declining products.
The future is the Internet and hence the future belongs to Google if they don't drop the ball.
Microsoft sometimes reminds me of Sony, focusing their efforts trying to reinvent the wheel (coming up with Silverlight and trying to persuade people from the ubiquitous Flash, developing .Net & ActiveX instead of supporting Java, etc.) rather than focusing on what they are truly good at. I guess I'm not surprised to hear of Microsoft's increasing troubles.
- by Michael_Martinez January 8, 2009 12:45 PM PST
- Number of searches performed is a meaningless and useless relic for measuring search market share. People use way more informational queries at Google than at other search engines. They are looking for their own names, tracking where their Web sites rank in various queries, performing phone book searches, product price searches, local business searches, and other queries that don't result in click-throughs to other sites.
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(5 Comments)Quantcast estimates that 100,000,000 people used Microsoft search destinations (live.com and search.msn.com) in November, whereas only Google served more visitors. Throughout 2008 Microsoft has increased its search audience share while Google has lost search audience share (Yahoo! has lost even more search audience share).
As long as Microsoft doesn't shift any resources away from its current search services it should be able to compete head-to-head with Google starting in 2009.