Archive for October, 2009
Poll: 70% of SEO Not Based on Performance
We completed a webinar with Search Marketing Now today, “Managing Search Success at the C-level: What Your CMO Should Know.” Great attendance and terrific insights from our moderator, Sramana Mitra (Forbes, Entrepreneurial Journeys). If you missed the webinar live last week, you can watch it on-demand by clicking here.
During the webcast, we were able to do a couple polling questions in real-time with the participants. Here’s one on how search gets measured internally. Interestingly, only 29% replied that organic search is measured by results - meaning 70% is measured in some other way - including “minimizing the expense.”
Weekly Search Engine Market Share Update
Last week I published information about how the market shares for the search engines have evolved over the last few months. I’m going to attempt to post updates almost every week, offset randomly by other interesting trends such as browser share numbers. This week, I’ve put together a weekly update, as quite a few people emailed me about the evolving trends.
To highlight the trend, I’ll re-post the data from early September.
Yahoo | Bing | Others | September 7 | 78.68% | 11.51% | 6.80% | 4.06% |
---|---|---|---|---|
September 14 | 78.35% | 11.13% | 6.50% | 4.02% |
September 21 | 77.43% | 11.35% | 7.11% | 4.12% |
September 28 | 77.65% | 10.80% | 7.27% | 4.28% |
October 4 | 77.78% | 10.66% | 7.23% | 4.25% |
October 12 | 77.78% | 10.66% | 7.21% | 4.36% |
October 18 | 77.89% | 10.65% | 7.29% | 4.16% |
Again, this data represents search engine click through activity where the people initiating the searches are located in the U.S. At some point I’ll present information on global search activity.
Search Engine Market Share Update October 2009
As mentioned in my previous post about browser usage, I’m going to start posting more data, more often. This week I’m putting out search engine market share numbers. I haven’t posted a U.S. search engine market share update since March 2008, so I’m definitely overdue!
Rather than providing a simple set of monthly numbers, I’ve decided to provide weekly breakdowns using aggregate data from our suite of search marketing tools, which makes it possible you review a few months worth of data at a detailed level. I’ll try to update these every two weeks, with weekly breakdowns for now, to try and identify trends in very granular ways. Interesting high-level, and consistent growth for Bing, overall growth for Yahoo! as demonstrated in this chart. Remember, this is based on clickthrough activity.
Astute observers may note that these numbers differ from other reports. Our data is collected at the web site level, based on actual referrals received. While people may search any of these engines more often, but not click through to the results. We report on the activity we see hitting the network of sites we’re tracking, and we are very careful to report only on the search referral traffic, so this won’t include referral traffic from Yahoo mail or gmail, for example. We’ve also rolled up all the various types of Google search activity into “Google” and not separated out Google Image Search / Blog Search, etc.
As you can see, Yahoo! and Bing have been climbing, slowly but steadily, as a percentage of overall search engine referral activity. For more details, please view the weekly breakdown chart below.
Yahoo | Bing | Others | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
April 5 | 82.74% | 9.49% | 4.99% | 2.77% |
April 13 | 82.65 | 9.60% | 4.99% | 2.76% |
April 20 | 82.03% | 9.85% | 5.30% | 2.82% |
April 27 | 82.20% | 9.62% | 5.41% | 2.76% |
May 4 | 81.26% | 9.55% | 5.22% | 3.97% |
May 11 | 80.98% | 9.69% | 5.17% | 4.16% |
May 18 | 79.94% | 10.45% | 5.32% | 4.29% |
May 25 | 80.06% | 10.39% | 5.37% | 4.19% |
June 1 | 79.80% | 10.44% | 5.39% | 4.37% |
June 8 | 79.48% | 10.69% | 5.53% | 4.30% |
June 15 | 79.41% | 10.54% | 5.79% | 4.26% |
June 22 | 79.40% | 10.56% | 5.79% | 4.26% |
June 29 | 79.52% | 10.37% | 5.62% | 4.48% |
July 6 | 79.51% | 10.46% | 5.48% | 4.55% |
July 13 | 79.69% | 10.31% | 5.56% | 4.44% |
July 20 | 79.61% | 10.30% | 5.62% | 4.48% |
July 27 | 78.21% | 11.18% | 6.18% | 4.43% |
August 3 | 78.77% | 10.95% | 6.06% | 4.22% |
August 10 | 77.92% | 11.54% | 6.36% | 4.18% |
August 17 | 77.33% | 11.82% | 6.80% | 4.06% |
August 24 | 78.11% | 11.51% | 6.27% | 4.11% |
August 31 | 78.62% | 11.27% | 6.27% | 4.11% |
September 7 | 78.68% | 11.51% | 6.80% | 4.06% |
September 14 | 78.35% | 11.13% | 6.50% | 4.02% |
September 21 | 77.43% | 11.35% | 7.11% | 4.12% |
September 28 | 77.65% | 10.80% | 7.27% | 4.28% |
October 4 | 77.78% | 10.66% | 7.23% | 4.25% |
October 12 | 77.78% | 10.66% | 7.21% | 4.36% |
In context of all three engines, here’s a chart of the global search engine referral rate market share numbers which does show interesting trends over the last few months.
Enquisite collects data from a network of web sites distributed globally. The data used in this reports represents web sites distributed globally, accessed by searchers located in the U.S.
Let me know if you would like a similar report for the UK, Canada or other areas, please.
Google Chrome, Safari and Firefox Continue to Grow; Don't Ignore Mobile
Around this time last year, I looked at browser market share in the context of Google’s Chrome browser release. The market has definitely changed quite a bit since last year. Most surprisingly for me is how Chrome rebounded from a soft launch. Firefox, Chrome and Safari now account for nearly 31% of search queries worldwide, up 50% over September, 2008. Interestingly, Firefox and Safari have both grown by almost 45% in their combined market share vs. November, 2008.
At first glance this particular data set doesn’t appear to help much with SEO. But usability is a major concern of any SEO, and browser compatibility is key to usability. So SEOs need to understand these trends and plan accordingly to render properly within the leading browsers.
Separately, my friend Cindy Krum is always asking me about mobile browser data. Total mobile browser market share now surpasses 1% of all search engine referral browser views. Not surprisingly, the iPhone leads the pack at is at almost 0.6% marketshare, which is significant, and double the share vs. April of this year. RIM, Opera and Android and a few others make up the remainder. One year ago, Android was a non-issue. Now, it’s 0.04%. Still tiny, but noticeable. SEOs need to pay attention to this emerging trend. The real estate in the organic listings on the mobile browsers is much smaller, and the likelihood of people on mobile browsers going to page 2 in the results is also lower, so being at the top of the page one listings in mobile really is all that matters.
July 2009 | August 2009 | September 2009 | |
---|---|---|---|
MSIE (all) | 67.59% | 66.75% | 66.61% |
Firefox | 19.09% | 21.99% | 21.13% |
Safari | 5.12% | 6.86% | 7.08% |
Chrome | 1.83% | 2.27% | 2.38% |
iPhone | 0.45% | 0.59% | 0.58% |
Android | 0.04% | 0.04% | 0.04% |
About the data. Enquisite works with thousands of sites worldwide and captures a trove of relevant search-related data every day. The browser shares reported here are based on data from a selection of Enquisite-tagged sites that cumulatively represent over 350 million page views/month, across most major industry sectors - a very significant sample size.
Lastly, yesterday marked the kick-off for SMX East. Sadly, I’m not going to be there this year, as I had to bow out at the last minute for personal reasons. I know a few people, Jessica Bowman among them, had commented that were looking forward to some data, so in that vein, I hope this provides some insight into what’s going on in the search world. More data on blog posts to come.
postscript - for those who don’t like having 2 windows open… here’s the numbers from last year…
Date | Chrome | Firefox | Safari | MS IE (All) |
---|---|---|---|---|
09/30/08 | 0.501% | 15.007% | 4.321% | 79.832% |
10/15/08 | 0.433% | 15.387% | 4.178% | 79.592% |
10/20/08 | 0.462% | 15.643% | 4.296% | 79.183% |
SES San Jose Panel: Measuring the Value of a Researcher
During the “Meaningful SEO Metrics: Going Beyond the Numbers” panel at SES San Jose, Enquisite president and founder Richard Zwicky and other industry members discuss how to measure the value of a researcher and how to justify optimizing a site for researchers.
SES San Jose Panel: Talking About Page Rank
Enquisite president and founder Richard Zwicky participates in “Meaningful SEO Metrics: Going Beyond the Numbers” at SES San Jose. In this segment, the panel discusses ways to move beyond Page Rank, indexed pages or linked sites and into metrics.