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Bing best for SEO keyword research?

June 23rd, 2009 admin No comments

Originally posted on Direct NewsOriginal Post Is Here.

Search newcomer Bing might offer the best tools on the market when it comes to highlighting current search trends, it has been suggested.

According to Erick Schonfeld of TechCrunch, Bing’s xRank feature seems to outperform Google Trends for displaying the most up-to-date trends in search queries, information that may aid companies’ search engine optimisation campaigns.

While Google Trends has a three-day lag on all keywords except the most popular ones, xRank is able to display information that is current as of today, he comments.

For example, conducting a search for golfer Ricky Barnes yesterday (June 21st) on xRank shows that web users prompted a spike in queries for the sportsman after leading the US Open over the weekend.

However, Google Trends had no data for the search as of yesterday.

“One feature where Microsoft seems to be edging out Google is with displaying recent search trends,” Mr Schonfeld commented.

“This may not be a major feature, but it shows a weakness in Google’s armour.”

Bing accounted for 12.1 per cent of US search results pages in its second week, up from 9.1 per cent in the week prior to its official launch, according to comScore.

Bing Adds Porn Domain

June 15th, 2009 admin 1 comment

Written by Paul MacDougall – Original Post Is Here.

Microsoft hopes the move will make it easier to block adult images and videos.

Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) has created a separate domain within its Bing search engine site that will be reserved exclusively for serving up pornographic images and videos. The domain, explicit.bing.net, will carry searchable content from adult magazine and video providers.The move is not an attempt to make Bing racier. In fact, according to Microsoft, it’s designed to make it easier for IT managers and others to filter inappropriate content. “Potentially explicit images and video content will now be coming from a separate, single domain,” said Bing general manager Mike Nichols, in a Friday blog post.

“This is invisible to the end customer, but allows for filtering of that content by domain name which makes it much easier for customers at all levels to block this content regardless of what the SafeSearch settings might be,” said Nichols.SafeSearch is a tool that can be configured to block potentially offensive material. But it’s controlled by the end-user and thus can be easily turned off. Because it routes explicit images through a separate domain that can be blocked at the server level, Microsoft’s new approach should make it easier for tech managers to ensure that pornographic images are not finding their way onto workplace computers via Bing.

Microsoft’s Bing reconfiguration comes in response to the discovery that the search engine’s Smart Motion Preview feature allows Bing to be used as a virtual porn theater. Unlike other search engines, which simply redirect users to the source of a video, Smart Motion lets users view snippets of content—adult or otherwise—simply by mousing over search results.

The discovery prompted criticisms and China and certain Muslim countries have blocked the feature.

“Microsoft is never done when it comes to providing tools to help customers, whether they are large enterprises, local school districts or parents to make sure they can provide a safe searching experience when using Bing,” Nichols wrote.

Microsoft formally launched Bing earlier this month as part of a broader effort to beef up its presence in the search market. It committed more than $1.5 billion to acquiring search, or search-driven businesses—including a $1.3 billion buyout of enterprise specialists Fast Search & Transfer—through the first nine months of 2008.

The company is hoping to close the gap with Google (NSDQ: GOOG) in search market share. Google presently controls about 64% of the U.S. search market, while Microsoft owns just 8% of the market, according to researchers at comScore. Yahoo, the number two player, holds 21% of the search market.

Categories: Bing News Tags: , ,

Bing under scrutiny of Google’s own Sergey Brin

June 15th, 2009 admin No comments

Written by James Doran – Original Post Is Here.

You’d think nothing would get under the skin of search giant Google.

But co-founder Sergey Brin is so rattled by the launch of Microsoft’s rival search engine that he has assembled a team of top engineers to work on urgent upgrades to his Web service, The Post has learned.

Brin, according to sources inside the tech behemoth, is himself leading the team of search-engine specialists in an effort to determine how Bing’s crucial search algorithm differs from that used by the company he founded in 1998 with Stanford University classmate Larry Page.

“New search engines have come and gone in the past 10 years, but Bing seems to be of particular interest to Sergey,” said one insider, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The move by Brin is unusual, as it is rare these days for the Google founders to have such hands-on involvement in day-to-day operations at the company, the source added.

A spokesman for Google declined to comment about Brin’s interest in Bing but said: “We always have a team working on improving search.” He added: “We dedicate more time and energy to search than anything else in our company. Our algorithm is constantly evolving.”

Microsoft launched Bing two weeks ago with a massive marketing budget that sources say ranged between $80 million and $100 million.

The software company has struggled to survive in the Internet-search business, with its former MSN search engine managing to grab only 8 percent of the lucrative search market share — far behind Google’s 60 percent and Yahoo!’s 20 percent share.

In fact, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, in an effort to close the gap on Google, last year made an offer to buy Yahoo! That offer was rejected. More recently, pre-Bing, there had been talk of Microsoft being interested in some sort of deal or partnership with Yahoo! search.

Those efforts have cooled.

Bing has been warmly greeted by analysts, critics and users alike who seem to largely welcome Microsoft’s new approach to the everyday business of searching the Internet. Early statistics show Bing increasing Microsoft’s market share by two percentage points, to about 11 percent — but that the gains largely didn’t come from Google or Yahoo!

Microsoft prefers not to use the term “search engine,” however, choosing instead to describe Bing as a “decision engine.”

While Bing is presented differently from Google — with a colorful home page and easy-to-navigate search categories compared with Google’s stark white page and search box — there is little difference between the two when it comes to searching for simple terms.

A spokeswoman for Microsoft said, however, that Bing is currently focused on improving search results in four main categories: shopping, travel, health and local searches.

Scott Kessler, senior equity research analyst at Standard & Poor’s, and a Google specialist, said that Bing has a lot going for it but he does not expect it to knock Google from its No. 1 perch.

“In a recent survey we found that the predominant features that dictate how people search the Internet are ease of use and force of habit. Google has been so dominant for so long that it will be tough for anyone to take significant market share away from them.”

Categories: Bing News Tags: , , ,

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