Microsoft Bing gains ground on Google in search stakes

Google remains majority share monster

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Microsoft in recent months has slowly boosted its share of the search business, but still remains far behind a so far unbeatable foe in its battle with Google.

Hitwise, an online traffic monitor, today reported that Google last month remained firmly at the head of the search pack while its rival's well regarded Microsoft Bing product gradually picks up a little traction. Google held a 70.95% share of the search market in February, according to Hitwise.

In recent months Google has maintained its wide lead with search market share totals ranging from a low of 70.60% last October to a high of 72.25% in December. Microsoft Bing, which held its third place spot behind Google and new partner Yahoo last month, has been moving in the right direction in recent months, rising from 8.92% of the search market in December to 9.37% in January and improving again to 9.70% last month.

Microsoft to update Bing with semantic search | Bing to replace Google on iPhone, say reports | Google opens cloud apps marketplace | Microsoft boosts Bing movie, TV and game search

Ezra Gottheil, an analyst with Technology Business Research, isn't surprised that Bing has been slow to make its mark in a market so dominated by Google.

"Even if [Bing] is getting traction, growth would be slow," Gottheil said. "People don't change without some impetus. Google isn't broken. Why fix it? At best, it's going to be a long road for Microsoft."

On the other hand, Gottheil noted that Bing isn't doing badly for a relatively new product, "9.7% of a huge business is a large business."

Meanwhile, Yahoo has been seeing a fairly steady decline since last September, according to Hitwise. While Yahoo did manage to hold firm at 14.57% of the market in both January and February, those numbers are down from 16.38% six months ago.

Gottheil noted that Yahoo's decline, while steady, has not been especially sharp. "A couple of points probably doesn't mean that much [so] there's no reason for anyone, Google, Bing or Yahoo users, to change."

Microsoft over the past year has been spending a lot of money and development resources to capture some of Google's hefty share of the search market.

It's latest move, signing a deal to have the Bing search engine power multiple Yahoo sites, could prove the most significant so far. That deal was approved last month by both the US Department of Justice and the European Commission.

The partnership also calls for Yahoo to sell premium search advertising services for both companies.


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