Google Wields 65 Percent Search Share

Google nabbed 65.8 percent of the US search market share in July, compared to Yahoo’s 17.1 percent and Microsoft Bing’s 11 percent share

Google continued to fend off Yahoo and Microsoft Bing in July, commanding 65.8 percent of the US search market share, according to a comScore report published on 17 August.

Google’s share is down from 66.2 percent share through June and its all-time high of 66.4 percent in May.

Yet the share is still almost four times greater than Yahoo’s market share, which is 17.1 percent, and six times that of Bing, now 11 percent.

Explicit Core Search

The numbers reflect comScore’s calculation of what the research calls Explicit Core Search, which excludes slideshows and contextual links.

ComScore’s Total Core Search methodology counts slideshows and contextual shortcuts Yahoo and Bing use to generate more search queries.

Users need only click on a slideshow once, but that single click triggered a series of web pages automatically, with each slide counting as clicks. Contextual links count as queries even when users only hover over words in news stories.

In Total Core Search, Google accounted for 61.6 percent of the market, compared to 20 percent for Yahoo and 12.6 percent for Bing.

Yahoo and Bing added slideshows and contextual shortcuts earlier this year, forcing comScore to offer metrics with contextual queries and without.

New Metrics

ComScore promised changes to its search market methodology in June and delivered with Explicit Core Search and Total Core Search. Search Engine Land has the complete details from comScore here.

Jefferies and Company analyst Youssef Squali approved of the methodology distinction. He noted that Explicit Core Search only tracks searches where users specifically entered queries to see search results, rather than enter a single query and getting a cascade of images and links counting as search queries.

“The new metric excludes searches in slideshows and in-text links, which made up for 21 percent and 19 percent of total core searches for Yahoo and Bing, respectively, in July,” Squali wrote in a research note on 17 August. “We believe that this is a cleaner and more appropriate metric to reflect the underlying search usage.”

Fighting Google

Even so, Google did lose 40 basis points from June, matching Yahoo’s gain. Could Yahoo, which is in the middle of transitioning its search platform to be powered by Bing, have stolen it from Google?

It remains to be seen whether Yahoo and Bing, which corral a combined 28 percent of the total US search market, can leverage their combined search engine forces to fight Google.

While Yahoo appears to be on the upswing, Bing seems to have stalled in growth and backslid a little. Bing went from 8 percent in June 2009 to 12.1 percent in June 2010, but is now notching 11 percent.

“The search share for Bing remained flat month-over-month at 11 percent, and roughly 60 basis points lower than March levels, indicating that Bing’s momentum is perhaps slowing down,” Squali observed.

“That said, with Yahoo’s share added in the [fourth quarter 2010], Bing should become the de-facto No. 2 search engine after Google, with 30 percent market share.”