03
2006
Google Breaks 60% – U.S. July Search Volume Numbers
In addition to market share of visits and page impressions, one of the statistics that Hitwise compiles is the volume of searches executed on the top search engines. Given our large sample, “top” is defined as 57 search engines used by U.S. internet users during a four week period.
Below is a table showing the top three engines Google, Yahoo! Search and MSN Search for the four weeks ending July 29, 2006.
As you can see, the top engines combined account for over 94% of all search volume in the US. Since we last released these numbers in June 2006, Google (www.google.com) has increased its share from 59.3% to 60.2%, Yahoo! Search (search.yahoo.com) has increased from 22.0% to 22.5% and MSN Search (search.msn.com) has decreased slightly from 12.1% to 11.8%.
In the last few days leading up to Search Engine Strategies, and during the conference, check back for more search engine stats that I’ll be reviewing during the Search Engine Landscape Panel on Monday.


Google breaks 60% market share
According to the Hitwise blog, Google (www.google.com) has increased its share from 59.3% to 60.2% for the four weeks ending July 29, 2006.
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All Hail The Omnipotent Googlebot
(Posted by Jarid Lukin, Director of E-Commerce, Alacra) (Picture is of Matt Cutts, Google Engineer and unoffficial SEO-liaison) There’s an interesting story about Google called Publishers vs. the Censorbot making its way around the blogosphere today. I…
Who needs any subscriptions to eMarketer when you have Bill Tancer and Hitwise. You guys rock!!
Eric
Yahoo and MSN have now taken proactive steps to reclaim some of their lost traffic to Google.
Do a search on MSN for the keyword GOOGLE or do it for YAHOO, and do a keyword search on Yahoo for the term GOOGLE -
You will now see a search field – suggesting to the users that they use the present search engine they are on :LOL
As, the overture keyword suggestion tool shows, there were MILLIONS of keywords terms with “GOOGLE” – perhaps users were leaving
used
Catchup – 8/12/06
Google and Yahoo have been quietly agreeing to deals that compensate some of the country’s top news organizations for their content and help drive more traffic to their Web sites and that a major shift might be ahead in the relationship between old m…
where is ask?
Statistics
Major Economic Indicators from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Other Bureau of Department of Labor Statistics, Research and P…
With the acquisition of YouTube Google has truly become “The Next Microsoft” that people have speculated on for some time.
Interesting post Bill!
Nevertheless, I would be interested in a further breakdown of these numbers. For example, how large is the video search share across all searches? It would be interesting to find out how well engines like lumerias.com, blinkx.com or video.aol.com are performing. Sadly, neither Hitwise nor Nielsen sport this type of analysis.