By Andrew Goodman, 6/14/2004
I've always been a stats junkie. In the search marketing
business, though, it hasn't been easy to get the data
that matter most. You hear conflicting reports about
just how strong competing search engines such as Yahoo,
MSN, and Google Search are in the marketplace. For
the past year I've been trying hard (in seminars,
on this site, as moderator of now-dormant MarketingVox
Search, etc.) to hammer home the point that Google's
lead in terms of search referrals is greater than
it ever was, and greater than you might think.
Never argue with the marketplace.
The argument is a difficult one to have in a context
where the Chicken Littles in the biz, typically bored
insiders hoping for a shakeup, are always coming up
with some reason that the leader is about to take
a precipitous dive in popularity. And the average
seminar attendee who has not been following the progress
of the online metrics agencies since 1998 will require
a careful explanation of just what "share of
searches" or any number of other "who's
in the lead" type stats actually means. That
can slow down the momentum of discussing what's really
going on out there. I can't tell you how many times
I've tried to urge marketers to narrow their focus
on a few core online channels, only to have them ignore
the data and come away from the presentation vaguely
muttering about needing to "get a presence in
the search engines, and it's all so complicated..."
But it isn't that complicated. Flawed, subjective
approaches to measurement just make it so.
It's definitely important to question methodologies
here, and presenting stats from several sources seems
paramount. Standard & Poor's, on the way to arriving
at a fair valuation for Google of a whopping $33 billion
to $40 billion, commissioned a run-of-the-mill survey
of 1,000 Internet users in the US and found that Google
was used/preferred (which?) by 48%, with Yahoo and
MSN "a distant second."
Not bad, since the number matches well with some
numbers provided by comScore Networks for the US in
April. Depending on which one you look at, that shows
Google at 44%, Yahoo at 37%, and MSN a distant third.
Marketers shouldn't believe that number for a second.
Last month, when ComScore released Canadian data showing
that Google's market share was 61%, it didn't make
sense to me that its number was so much lower in the
US, and that Yahoo was the cause of that low US market
share number for Google.
There is no denying that Yahoo is a very popular
and profitable web property, and people are conducting
a lot of different kinds of "searches" on
there that deserve to be counted, but from a marketer's
standpoint it just does not seem as if these are the
kinds of searches that actually translate into search
referrals to our clients' websites. Ever since Yahoo
dropped its directory, and more so with the ascendancy
of Google Search, and perhaps even more so after Yahoo
dropped Google as its provider of index search, it
doesn't seem like Yahoo is referring a lot of searches
of the "web search" variety.
Now that the international survey from comScore,
based on its qSearch panel-based methodology, is out,
the strength of Google in international markets is
emphasized even more. The key metric that this survey
focuses on is the "share of searches" in
a given month. What comScore has done this time around
to simplify the measurements is to measure the percentage
share of only the top three search destinations. So
in the Canadian case, dropping minor players out of
the calculation, Google now clocks in at 70%, with
Yahoo trailing badly at 17%. It's tough to sugar-coat
a disparity that wide. Frankly it does not bode well
for Yahoo. Endlessly-touted vaporware by MSN Search
has yet to materialize, so perhaps appropriately,
it languishes at 13%.
Like AOL, both Yahoo and MSN have attempted to muscle
their way into users' consciousness by making deals
with major domestic portals & ISP's. Recently
for example, Sympatico and MSN co-launched a Canadian
"super portal" initiative with a well-publicized
launch announcement at a downtown Toronto furniture
store, with the side theme being the "wired home."
Few journalists understood the point; page after page
of full-color newspaper ads far outstripped the column
inches devoted to the dubious "launch."
It's fair to say you could count the number of interested
users on two hands. The face-saver for the two companies
in the deal can always be the fact that anyone subscribing
to Sympatico's DSL service and using Hotmail can technically
be counted as someone taking advantage of the dubious
"super portal" bundle.
Meanwhile, Google spends $0 on advertising, and has
a 70% market share in Canada. (Seth Godin must be
smiling. His latest book, Free Prize Inside, emphasizes
the fact that delighting consumers is the way to win
over markets, and that expensive marketing campaigns
rarely work today.)
Plus -- again according to the recent release by
comScore based on its qSearch survey -- Google's share
of searches in France is 80% (10% Yahoo, 10% MSN);
and 77% in the UK (14% Yahoo, 9% MSN). And that leaves
dozens of large markets without accurate share-of-searches
measurements for us to assess, but clearly, most of
them are going to show Google well over 50%. This
massive popularity points to a real opportunity and
hints at some real challenges that will face Google
as it grows into its role as a maturing international
company. But above all, contrary to what you might
have been told, it shows that portals like Yahoo,
MSN, and AOL have an uphill climb if they're to convince
significant numbers of users to use them for their
daily search engine needs.