Yahoo and Microsoft Extend Search Partnership

YahooBingLogoIn a joint release issued today, Microsoft and Yahoo announced that they will be amending and extending the strategic search partnership they originally signed in 2009.

The renewed partnership has two major amendments:

1) Yahoo will have increased flexibility to provide search functionality to other platforms, on both desktop and mobile search as the partnership is non-exclusive. Yahoo will continue serving search results and Bing Ads to desktop search audiences.

2) Microsoft will become the exclusive sales force for ads delivered by the Bing Ads platform, while Yahoo will continue to be the exclusive sales force for Yahoo’s Gemini ads platform.

The revenue split of the original partnership appears to remain unchanged. Yahoo will continue to receive a share of the profits delivered to Microsoft via Bing Ads displayed within Yahoo search results.

The partnership extension clearly indicates the joint venture has been a profitable one for both companies and a tactic that continues to help each of the companies compete with the market Goliath that is Google.

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Fast Five in Search – Week 22, 2014

fast-five

 

It’s a mixed bag of links for you this week. We’ve got three juicy links about blogging and a couple of news items relating to the search industry and search engines. Here we go!

Here’s this week’s Fast Five:

1) Google Hits eBay with Manual Penalty – by Search Engine Land. I did a double-take when this headline came up in my Twitter feed. But apparently it’s true! Even the big guys – in this case eBay – have been hit hard by Google’s latest Panda algorithm tweaks. But on top of that, it seems eBay have been put in the naughty corner by Google in the form of a manual ranking penalty as well. Ouch.

2) The Boring Niche’s Secret Weapon (and How to Use it) by Copyblogger – This post spoke to me loud and clear. It contains a key piece of advice I have been giving my search marketing students and clients for years: You can always find something to blog about or write copy about, related to your niche. ALWAYS.

3) Optimize Blog Content for Social Media With These 4 Effective Tactics by ProBlogger – Speaking of blog content, this article over at ProBlogger demonstrates 4 simple, but effective tactics you can use within your blog content, to help it gain more traction via social media.

4) DuckDuckGo Relaunches & Starts to Look Like a Real Search Engine by Search Engine Land – DuckDuckGo showed a lot of promise when they launched back in 2008. Their point of difference has always been the fact they are community-driven, but a big component of their appeal is their approach to user privacy. Unlike the larger search engines, DuckDuckGo don’t track your usage and therefore they don’t collect personal or private information. Their relaunch this week sees DuckDuckGo roll out some powerful search features previously lacking, which should help them compete with the big boys.

and finally…

5) Dear Hubspot, My Blog Isn’t Generating Leads. Please Help? by Hubspot – Ah yes, we’ve all been here. The nasty case of Blogger’s Block when your conversions just dwindle away and you can’t think of anything to reverse the trend. So what’s a Miserable Marketer to do? Ask Hubspot for advice! This Q and A style post outlines the problem a blogger in Milwaukee is having generating leads with his blog and some logical suggestions from Hubspot for how he can clear the blockage and kick-start his blog back into converting again.

Happy blogging!

*Image courtesy of Threadless.

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Yahoo! Tops Google for Web Traffic

Yahoo beats GoogleWow. I’d never thought I’d get to type this in 2013: Yahoo! has ousted Google to become the number 1 source of US web traffic.

The comScore Top 50 US Web Properties report for July 2013 reveals that Yahoo! owned sites attracted more unique visitors than any other networks, including Google. The numbers are pretty close – Yahoo! traffic only beat Google traffic by less than 300,000 visits, but this win is a significant one for Yahoo!, given they haven’t been at the number #1 spot since 2008, according to Greg Sterling.

You might think these numbers were influenced by Yahoo!’s recent purchase of Tumblr, however Tumblr is ranked separately in the report, way down at position #28. Which makes me think that the hard work put in by Marissa Mayer and her new management team over the past 12 months is finally starting to gain traction.

It must be a sweet victory for ex-Google executive Mayer, who took over the top job when Yahoo! was in crisis – struggling from years of poor leadership and financial mismanagement. Despite an overall revenue dip of 7 percent compared with this time last year, Yahoo!’s latest financial figures reveal solid income growth for the past quarter – up 150 percent on the previous year.

The upshot of this for webmasters is: you simply CANNOT continue to put all your eggs in the Google basket. I say this until I’m blue in the face: Google is NOT the Internet. Both Yahoo! and Bing are major players in the search industry with the potential to provide as much – or in Yahoo!’s case, more – traffic than Google.

If traffic from Google dominates your site stats, take action now:

  • Optimize your sites with ALL the search engines in mind. Learn what content / tag structure ranks well on Yahoo! and Bing. Optimize your pages accordingly.
  • Study your analytics and learn what keywords convert better on Yahoo! and Bing. Better optimize your content for those keywords.
  • Observe how much traffic you get from Yahoo! and Yahoo! partner sites. Compare conversion rates for this traffic with the traffic you get from Google and other sources.
  • If you haven’t already established a Bing Ads account, create one and start experimenting with paid advertising on the Bing and Yahoo! networks.
  • Verify your web site/s via Bing Webmaster Tools and start observing your site performance via that account.
  • To encourage indexing, upload your XML sitemap to Bing and Yahoo! via Webmaster Tools and keep it up to date.
  • Monitor your performance in all search engines to reduce your reliance on Google traffic.

Taking action now will mean that you’ll be one step ahead of your competitors and more importantly, if your Google rankings suddenly plummet – *cough* Panda, Penguin *cough* – you’ll have traffic from other sources to catch your fall.

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Death of Del.icio.us Leaves Bitter Aftertaste for Yahoo!

deliciousDel.icio.us fans worldwide are in shock today with the news that Yahoo has decided to terminate the site, along with Altavista, MyBlogLog, AllTheWeb, Yahoo! Bookmarks and Yahoo! Picks and Yahoo! Buzz.

News broke on TechCrunch this morning after a leaked slide from an internal Yahoo! product team meeting fell into the hands of Eric Marcoullier, who co-founded blog social network MyBlogLog. It has since been removed from YFrog, but the slide depicts three columns titled Sunset / Merge / Make Feature with Del.icio.us, Altavista, MyBlogLog, Yahoo! Bookmarks, AllTheWeb, Yahoo! Picks and Yahoo! Buzz listed under the not so subtle *Sunset* column.

Marcoullier tweeted the slide from his account and then all hell broke loose, with Yahoo Product Manager Blake Irving even threatening to fire whomever leaked the slide.

Del.icio.us fans in particular have been very vocal about the news, voicing their opposition to Yahoo’s decision using Twitter hashtags such as #savedelicious and #delicious and even creating an online petition which can be *signed* by retweeting it. Ironically, many of the top bookmarks at Delicious today featured it’s demise.

The product terminations come the same week Yahoo! announced layoffs for 4 percent of its global staff.

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A Short History of the Search Industry

Short history of the search industryIf you’re a regular reader of this blog, you’ve probably gathered by now that the search industry moves at a blistering pace.

Search industry heavyweights like Google, Yahoo! and Bing are constantly jostling for position to be the most popular search destination, have the largest search database, have the most relevant results and grab the most market share.  As is typical for such a heated industry, it’s in a constant state of flux.

Since I joined the industry in 1996, I’ve watched search companies make deals, break partnerships, launch products, copy technology, sue each other or simply buy each other outright. Even if you live and breathe search, it’s hard to keep up to speed with what’s going on, so it’s not suprising that newcomers to the industry can be completely overwhelmed!

While writing new content for our Search Engine Optimization courses at Search Engine College, I thought it might be fun to put together a bullet point history of the major events over the past 10+ years to help students make sense of this crazy industry. So here it is:


A Short History of the Search Industry

  • Feb 1994 – Stanford University Electrical Engineering graduates Jerry Yang and David Filo founded a website called “David and Jerry’s Guide to the World Wide Web” which was later renamed Yahoo!
  • 1995 – AltaVista, the first search engine to use a multi-threaded crawler (Scooter), was launched by researchers at Digital Equipment Corporation’s Western Research Laboratory.
  • March 1995 – Yahoo! became officially incorporated.
  • August 1995 – The Microsoft Network (later rebranded as MSN) debuted as an online service and Internet service provider to coincide with the release of the Windows 95 operating system.
  • 1996 – Stanford University Computer Science graduates Larry Page and Sergey Brin began collaborating on a search engine called BackRub.
  • 1997 – Page and Brin rebranded BackRub as Google. See the original Google Home Page.
  • 1995 – The web portal Go.com was first launched by entrepreneur Jeff Gold.
  • 1995 – Inktomi Corporation was founded by UC Berkeley professor Eric Brewer and graduate student Paul Gauthier based on the success of the search engine they developed at the university.
  • 1998 – Infoseek was merged into the Go.com network.
  • 1998 – Go.com was acquired by the Walt Disney Company and redeveloped into The Go Network portal using Infoseek search technology.
  • 1998 – The MSN.com domain name was reinvented as an Internet portal, putting MSN Search in direct competition with search sites such as Yahoo! and the Go Network.
  • Feb 1998 – GoTo.com became the first company to successfully provide a pay-for-placement search service (a pre-cursor to today’s PPC programs).
  • Sep 1998 – Google Inc. became incorporated as a private company and began operating out of a home garage in California.
  • Feb 1999 – MSN Search launched a revised search engine which displayed listings from Looksmart blended with results from Inktomi.
  • Jun 2000 – Google became the official search results provider for Yahoo!
  • Jun 2000 – Google reached 1 billion pages indexed, becoming the world’s largest search engine.
  • Oct 2000 – Google launched the AdWords self-service ad program in direct competition to GoTo.com.
  • Jan 2001 – Disney announced that it would be closing Go.com, its search engine and its volunteer-edited directory, prompting the creation of offshoot directories like JoeAnt, Goguides.org and Skaffe.com.
  • Mar 2001 – Go.com rebranded as GoTo.com and switched over to providing search results from paid listings service GoTo.com, with non-paid results from parent company Inktomi.
  • Oct 2001 – GoTo.com rebranded as Overture Services Inc.
  • Dec 2001 – Google reached 3 billion pages indexed.
  • Sep 2002 – Google News is launched.
  • 2002-2003 – Google became king of the search engines and the most popular search destination with worldwide Internet users, wrenching market share away from Yahoo.
  • Feb 2003 – Yahoo purchased the Inktomi search index.
  • Feb 2003 – Google acquired the Blogger brand from Pyra Labs.
  • Feb 2003 – Google was named Brand of the Year for 2002.
  • Mar 2003 – Google launched AdSense.
  • Apr 2003 – Pay-Per-Click provider Overture bought search engine Alta-Vista.
  • Apr 2003 – Overture purchased search engine AllTheWeb from FAST Search.
  • Jun 2003 – FAST Search purchased AltaVista Enterprise Search from Overture.
  • June 2003 – Microsoft announced their intention to build their own search engine.
  • Jul 2003 – Yahoo purchased Overture (including AltaVista and AllTheWeb).
  • Oct 2003 – LookSmart lost their MSN distribution partnership.
  • Nov 2003 – Google rolled out a major algorithmic update across data-centers, nicknamed *Florida* because of the hurricane-like impact it had on the SEO of many web sites.
  • Jan 2004 – Pay-Per-Click providers FindWhat and eSpotting merged.
  • Jan 2004 – Yahoo launched Yahoo Research Labs.
  • Feb 2004 – Google expanded their web index to over 6 billion documents.
  • Feb 2004 – Yahoo dropped Google results and launched their own search crawler.
  • Mar 2004 – AskJeeves purchased Excite.
  • Apr 2004 – Google announced an Initial Public Offering (IPO).
  • Apr 2004 – Google launched Gmail.
  • Apr 2004 – Google purchased Picasa.
  • Jun 2004 – Overture (Yahoo) launched Local Sponsored Search
  • Aug 2004 – Google and Yahoo resolved their patent disputes.
  • Aug 2004 – Google rolled out their Initial Public Offering (IPO), listing on the stock exchange and becoming a public company.
  • Sep 2004 – MSN launched MSN Music.
  • Oct 2004 – Yahoo launched mobile search.
  • Oct 2004 – Google launched Desktop Search
  • Oct 2004 – Yahoo unveiled personal search.
  • Nov 2004 – Microsoft upgraded MSN Search to provide its own self-built search engine results, codenamed Longhorn.
  • Nov 2004 – Overture (Yahoo) extended sponsored search relationship with MSN until 2006.
  • Dec 2004 – MSN launched the MSN Spaces blogging service.
  • Jan 2005 – Yahoo launched Yahoo Desktop Search.
  • Jan 2005 – Google launched AdWords API.
  • Jan 2005 – Google launched Google Video.
  • Feb 2005 – Yahoo launched Yahoo Music.
  • Feb 2005 – Google added Movie Search.
  • Feb 2005 – Google moved Google Local to their home page.
  • Mar 2005 – Yahoo launched Yahoo Search Developer Network.
  • Mar 2005 – Yahoo re-branded Overture as Yahoo Search Marketing.
  • Mar 2005 – MSN launched the MSN adCenter online advertising platform.
  • Mar 2005 – Google purchased Urchin Stats.
  • Apr 2005 – Yahoo launched Personal Search.
  • Apr 2005 – Google launched My Search History.
  • Apr 2005 – Google launched Site Targeting in AdWords.
  • Apr 2005 – Google launched Google Advertising Professionals program.
  • May 2005 – MSN launched MSN China.
  • May 2005 – Google launched Toolbar 3.0.
  • May 2005 – Google launched AdSense for Feeds.
  • June 2005 – Google launched Google Maps.
  • Jun 2005 – Google launched Google Sitemaps.
  • Jun 2005 – Google launched Mobile Web Search.
  • Jun 2005 – Google added Personalized Search.
  • Jun 2005 – Yahoo settles click fraud class action suit with Checkmate Strategic Group.
  • Jun 2005 – Google released Google Earth.
  • Jul 2005 – Yahoo revamped their home page.
  • Jul 2005 – Google announced China office.
  • Aug 2005 – Google launched Google Talk.
  • Aug 2005 – Yahoo launched Audio Search.
  • Sep 2005 – Google launched Blog Search.
  • Sep 2005 – Google announces partnership with NASA.
  • Oct 2005 – Google launched Google Reader.
  • Oct 2005 – Google merged Google Local and Google Maps.
  • Nov 2005 – Google launched Google Base.
  • Nov 2005 – Yahoo launched a mapping service.
  • Nov 2005 – Google launched Google Analytics.
  • Nov 2005 – Google launched Froogle Local.
  • Nov 2005 – Google launched AdSense OnSite Advertiser Sign Up.
  • Dec 2005 – Google re-vamped and re-launched Book Search.
  • Dec 2005 – Yahoo launched Yahoo Answers.
  • Dec 2005 – Google and AOL announced global advertising partnership.
  • Dec 2005 – Google created Music Onebox Search.
  • Jan 2006 – Google launched the Google Video Store.
  • Jan 2006 – Google News comes out of BETA.
  • Jan 2006 – Google releases new version of Google Toolbar
  • Jan 2006 – Google released Google Pack.
  • Feb 2006 – Yahoo re-launched Yahoo Music.
  • Mar 2006 – Google launched AdWords Local Business Ads.
  • Mar 2006 – The first public beta of Windows Live Search was unveiled by Microsoft.
  • May 2006 – Yahoo re-designed Yahoo Search Marketing.
  • May 2006 – Google launched the Google Co-op.
  • May 2006 – Google launched Google Desktop 4.
  • May 2006 – Google launched Google Notebook.
  • May 2006 – Google launched video ads on Google AdWords.
  • May 2006 – Yahoo re-vamped their home page.
  • May 2006 – Yahoo announced strategic partnership with eBay.
  • Jun 2006 – Google launched Google Spreadsheets.
  • Jun 2006 – Google introduced Ad Scheduling for Google AdWords.
  • Jun 2006 – Google combined Google Analytics with Google AdWords reporting.
  • Jun 2006 – Google launched Google Checkout.
  • Jul 2006 – Google launched Google Maps for Mobiles.
  • Aug 2006 – Yahoo re-branded Yahoo Music to Yahoo Music Jukebox.
  • Aug 2006 – Yahoo signed mobile search advertising deal with go2
  • Sep 2006 – Google News introduced Archive Search.
  • Sep 2006 – Windows Live Search officially replaced MSN Search.
  • Oct 2006 – Google launched Google Docs and Spreadsheets.
  • Oct 2006 – Google launched AdWords Website Optimizer BETA.
  • Nov 2006 – Google acquired YouTube.
  • Nov 2006 – Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft announced joint support for the Sitemaps Protocol.
  • Dec 2006 – Google added new features to Google Toolbar for Firefox.
  • Dec 2006 – Yahoo launched the Yahoo Search Marketing PPC service to directly compete with AdWords.
  • Dec 2006 – Google launched Google Patent Search.
  • Jan 2007 – Google launched mobile search in China.
  • Jan 2007 – Yahoo launched Internet Search for Mobile.
  • Feb 2007 – Google made Gmail available to the general public.
  • Mar 2007 – Windows Live Search was rebranded to Live Search.
  • Mar 2007 – Google launched AdWords Pay Per Action BETA.
  • Mar 2007 – Yahoo launched Yahoo Go for Mobile.
  • Apr 2007 – Opera named Yahoo exclusive partner for mobile search.
  • Apr 2007 – Yahoo and Comcast announced advertising partnership.
  • Apr 2007 – Google announced acquisition of DoubleClick.
  • May 2007 – Google launched a new version of Google Analytics.
  • May 2007 – Google launched Universal Search model.
  • Jun 2007 – Google acquired FeedBurner.
  • Jun 2007 – Microsoft launched MSN Mobile.
  • Jun 2007 – Yahoo launched Search Marketing APIs.
  • Jul 2007 – Yahoo acquired Right Media.
  • Aug 2007 – Yahoo re-launched Yahoo Mail.
  • Sep 2007 – Google launched AdSense for Mobile.
  • Sep 2007 – Microsoft launched MSN Video.
  • Oct 2007 – Google launched video units for AdSense.
  • Oct 2007 – Yahoo re-launched Yahoo Search.
  • Nov 2007 – Google launched OpenSocial.
  • Nov 2007 – Yahoo and Adobe announced advertising program for PDF publishers.
  • Dec 2007 – FTC cleared Google’s acquisition of DoubleClick.
  • Dec 2007 – Yahoo and CNBC announced a global distribution agreement.
  • Feb 2008 – Google launched Google Sites.
  • Feb 2008 – Microsoft made a bid to purchase Yahoo for 45 billion.
  • Feb 2008 – Yahoo officially rejected Microsoft’s acquisition offer.
  • Feb 2008 – Yahoo launched Yahoo Buzz.
  • Mar 2008 – Google completed acquisition of DoubleClick.
  • Jun 2008 – Microsoft and Yahoo ended acquisition negotiations.
  • Jun 2008 – Yahoo started using Google ads in US & Canada.
  • Jul 2008 – Yahoo rejected new Microsoft acquisition proposal.
  • Sep 2008 – Google launched Chrome, a new open source browser.
  • May 2009 – Google launched Google Wave.
  • May 2009 – Microsoft re-branded Live Search as Bing.
  • May 2009 – Microsoft launched MSN City Guides featuring Bing Maps.
  • Jul 2009 – Microsoft and Yahoo announced major search and advertising partnership.
  • Jul 2009 – Google announced the launch of their own operating system – the Google Chrome OS.
  • Oct 2009 – Google launched Social Search.
  • Oct 2009 – Google announced partnership with Twitter to include their updates in search results.
  • Dec 2009 – Google redesigned their home page for the first time in many years.
  • Dec 2009 – Google Real Time Search went live.
  • Jan 2010 – Google entered the retail market by launching their own mobile device – the Nexus One.
  • Feb 2010 – Google launched their social network Buzz.
  • Feb 2010 – Microsoft and Yahoo announced the impending implementation of their Search Alliance.
  • Feb 2010 – Yahoo partnered with Twitter to integrate content and enhance social search experience.
  • Apr 2010 – Google Real-Time Search was enhanced with Twitter content.
  • Apr 2010 – Google Local Business Center was renamed Google Places.
  • May 2010 – Google rolled out a completely new look for SERPs and an algorithm update later nicknamed *MayDay*.
  • Jun 2010 – Launch of Google’s new search index Caffeine provided 50 percent fresher results than previous index.
  • Jun 2010 – Yahoo announced a partnership with Facebook to integrate their content into Yahoo Search results and allow users to link their accounts.
  • Aug 2010 – Google announced discontinuation of Google Wave.
  • Sep 2010 – Google Instant is launched, with predictive search results appearing as you type.
  • Oct 2010 – Google launched Place Search functionality that helps you find local information by organizing websites around real world places.
  • Oct 2010 – Yahoo rolled out new interactive features in their search results including rich content and multimedia search.
  • Oct 2010 – Bing became the 4th largest search engine on the web by query volume.
  • Oct 2010 – Yahoo Search Marketing PPC accounts were transitioned to Microsoft adCenter accounts, combining the services into a single brand.
  • Oct 2010 – Bing announced partnership with Facebook, integrating more social signals into search results.
  • Nov 2010 – Google added local product availability to Google Place Search.
  • Nov 2010 – Bing launched Movie Search.
  • Nov 2010 – Yahoo launched new social and local search features, including Twitter integration and local Search apps within Yahoo search results pages.
  • Nov 2010 – Google rolled out a new interface for Google AdSense.
  • Nov 2010 – Yahoo launched the Yahoo Contributor Network.
  • Dec 2010 – Yahoo announced they would be shutting down Del.icio.us, Altavista, MyBlogLog, Yahoo! Bookmarks, Yahoo! Picks and Yahoo! Buzz.

Wow. I don’t know about you, but my head is spinning. I know it’s not the most exciting way to present the data, but I’m working on a bells and whistles version for the new year.

I’ll keep this search industry timeline updated with major activities taking place, so make sure you bookmark it now.

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