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ComScore: Combined Microsoft and Yahoo U.S. search share stuck at 28 percent

By | January 14, 2011, 7:21am PST

Summary: The December 2010 comScore search data is out. While Microsoft is continuing to make modest gains, Microhoo is not.

The December 2010 comScore search data is out. While Microsoft is continuing to make modest gains, Microhoo is not.

Google’s U.S. explicit core search share was up slightly over November. Yahoo’s was down, and Microsoft’s also was up slightly.

(Explicit core search share removes certain categories of searches that comScore doesn’t deem to be actual “user-engaged” searches.)

Here’s what the last three months looked like, according to comScore:

Google (percent U.S. explicit core search market)
October  66.3
November 66.2
December 66.6

Yahoo
October  16.5
November 16.4
December 16.0

Microsoft
October  11.5
November 11.8
December 12.0

Microhoo (Microsoft +Yahoo)
October  28.0
November 28.2
December 28.0

Three months doesn’t an absolute trend make, but Microsoft is continuing to grow its U.S. search share constinually, according to the comScore data. On the other hand, as some pundits predicted would happen, Yahoo’s share is continuing to shrink constantly. The net: The overall share of Microhoo is hovering around 28 percent.

Yahoo officials said this week the global transition of certain Yahoo Search back-end functions to Microsoft’s search platform is continuing, and the company just completed that transition for organic search in Australia, Brazil and Mexico.

Google’s gotten some bad press around the quality (or lack thereof) of its search results as of late. But will average users ever see that information or care?  I’m curious whether Microsoft can grow Bing beyond 28 percent share here in the U.S. — minus any kind of major gaffe by Google. Do you see that happening? If so, how?

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Topics

Mary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 25 years for a variety of publications and Web sites, and is a frequent guest on radio, TV and podcasts, speaking about all things Microsoft-related. She is the author of Microsoft 2.0: How Microsoft plans to stay relevant in the post-Gates era (John Wiley & Sons, 2008).

Disclosure

Mary-Jo Foley

Freelance journalist/blogger Mary Jo Foley has nothing to disclose. WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get). I do not own Microsoft stock or stock in any of its partners or competitors. I have no business ventures that are sponsored by/funded by Microsoft or any of its partners or competitors.

Biography

Mary-Jo Foley

Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 25 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She has kept close tabs on Microsoft strategy, products and technologies for the past 10 years. In the late 1990s, she penned the award-winning "At The Evil Empire" column for ZDNet, and more recently the Microsoft Watch blog for Ziff Davis.

Got a tip? Send her an email with your rants, rumors, tips and tattles. Confidentiality guaranteed.

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RE: ComScore: Combined Microsoft and Yahoo U.S. search share stuck at 28 percent
dfwekrwe44-24353611083890172929229494159280 Updated - 10th Nov
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Bing should launch the Bing HTML5 Preview they showed off at WWDC and IE9 Beta launch event. It looked very promising.
@jarrichvdv oh yea, I forgot about that. It really did look nice
0 Votes
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But it looks like Google's not growing like it used to
AllKnowingAllSeeing 14th Jan 2011
it looks to be stuck around 66%. Wasn't it higher in the past?
0 Votes
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What is the revenue deal with Yahoo?
HollywoodDog 14th Jan 2011
Does Microsoft keep part of the revenue from Yahoo search? Does all of Yahoo generated Yahoo stay at Yahoo?
@HollywoodDog If I remember correctly, Yahoo gets 88% of the revenue generated from their sites.

Despite recent complaints about Google results, I doubt Bing can make up much ground here. In general, the results are "good enough" regardless of your camp. The one x-factor being the Bing/Facebook collaboration, which hasn't yielded anything useful for me yet.

If the rivalry between Google and Apple grows enough for Apple to use Bing as its default search then things could get very interesting.
0 Votes
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Just like your posts!
John Zern 14th Jan 2011
@james347

LOL!
0 Votes
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M$ is on the brink
Linux Geek 14th Jan 2011
Google has eaten M$ lunch long ago and now is closing in for the kill with Chrome!
0 Votes
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No such luck
Ammalgam Updated - 14th Jan 2011
Google is a pillar of American life now. It's a verb the same way Xerox became a verb.

Who knows what Bing is? If anything, I see Google taking even more marketshare as they are only more likely to improve their algorithm.

http://www.windows8update.com
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Ballmer memory lane
HollywoodDog 14th Jan 2011
What did he have to say about Google?

"Ballmer's threat ... was recounted in a sworn declaration by a former Microsoft engineer, Mark Lucovsky, who said he met with Microsoft's chief executive 10 months ago to discuss his decision to leave the company after six years.

After learning Lucovsky was leaving to take a job at Google, Ballmer picked up his chair and hurled it across his office, according to the declaration.

Ballmer then pejoratively berated Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Lucovsky recalled.

"I'm going to f---ing bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again," the declaration quotes Ballmer. "I'm going to f---ing kill Google." "
@HollywoodDog
Story isn't true. I can't believe people still post this because some disgruntled employee who should never have been working at Microsoft in the first place got fired and made up some lies.
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Absolutely...
HollywoodDog 14th Jan 2011
@Loverock Davidson ... no CEO at Microsoft ever uses the F word, right? (Some people told me it's the most common word they do use up there)
0 Votes
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By the way
HollywoodDog 14th Jan 2011
@Loverock Davidson ... before you go pointing the dirty end of the perjury stick at Mr. Lucovsky, you'd better be sure you can prove it.
@HollywoodDog
I won't take a disgruntled employee's word for it, that is for sure.
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Let's be realistic
apexwm 14th Jan 2011
Microsoft and its employees have a large ego, it's not yesterday's news. I'm sure there are words like that being said all of the time around there, no doubt about it.
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I suspect that Bing Cashback will make a comeback now that Bing isn't gaining any more market share. It's been stagnant around 3.2-3.3% for a year according to NetMarketShare. Microsoft likes to bribe and pay people to use their software, since no other ways seem to work.
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Desirable sharp submit. By no means imagined that it had been this easy. Extolment mulberry outlets for you!
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RE: ComScore: Combined Microsoft and Yahoo U.S. search share stuck at 28 percent
dfwekrwe44-24353611083890172929229494159280 Updated - 10th Nov
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