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Internet search up almost 40 percent this year

March 13, 2006

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According to new numbers compiled by Nielsen/NetRatings, in January of this year, Internet users in the U.S. made about 2.73 billion Web searches using Google.

As a whole, Nielsen/NetRatings is estimating that about 48 percent of the 5.7 billion Internet searches made by Americans in January were done using the Google search engine.

It also thinks that 39 percent more searches were done in January 2006 than in the same month last year.

"Internet users are searching more not because they can't find what they're looking for, but because search as a utility has become deeply ingrained into people's everyday lives", said Ken Cassar of Nielsen/NetRatings.

The unwritten implication here is that Google too has assumed huge importance in the lives of many web users.

For some, Google is all they know of the internet because via its various projects that they do their searching, shopping, e-mailing, blogging, picture storing and chatting.

But Google is not just important to lots of web users, it matters to rivals of the search giant too.

"There's a standard way of using search engines that Google has introduced to the market," said Adrian Cox, head of Ask, formerly Ask Jeeves, in the UK.

But, he said, what has become clear is that search is now just the starting point for that relationship people have with the web.

No longer do the different search sites compete on how many results they can provide to people not least because, as even Google admits, most people get what they want in the first five results returned to them.

Which is why all the search sites, Google, MSN, AOL and Yahoo are branching out and trying to tempt users to live their online lives via their particular portfolio of services.

Most of these companies make their most significant amounts of money from advertising and that only comes from having a large, well-defined community.

Advertisers are far more likely to pay to reach Canon digital camera using kitten lovers in the Bay area than they are to pay to air adverts to women who happen to be watching Desperate Housewives on TV.

This need for large well-defined audiences also explains why Google, Yahoo, MSN, Yahoo and others are snapping up web firms such as Flickr, Bloglines and Del.icio.us, which come complete with a ready made community.

It is why Rupert Murdoch's News Corp snapped up MySpace as it was a great way to get a foothold in this market.

It also explains why many start-ups are being bought moments after they launch because all the big players are afraid of missing out on the next big thing. For that reason, as well as many others, Google bought the online word processing site Writely.

The need to go beyond the basic search is also the reason why Ask Jeeves recently became just Ask.

In the early days of the web Ask Jeeves tried to set itself apart by letting people ask questions of its search engine rather than just use keywords.

"Now," said Mr Cox, "more than 90% of the queries on the site are keywords rather than questions."

In a bid to do more for those that use Ask, the company has introduced a set of new tools that, again, aim to set it apart from the competition.

The average number of search engines per user is 2.5 said Mr Cox, and increasingly people are realising that not all search engines are created equal.

This same realisation has prompted the UK arm of venerable web firm Lycos to change what it does. The company is introducing a system called Lycos IQ that taps the expertise and interest of its dedicated users to create what it calls a "human search engine".

This encourages users to post questions which then get answered by the community. Questions could be generally factual and seek information about historical figures.

They could be social and ask where is the best place to eat Thai food in Darlington on a wet Wednesday?

Answers to searches are tagged and can be bookmarked if users find them particularly useful.

There is also a sense that money spent now is an investment in a future when everything gets to people via the web.

Already figures are emerging that young people prefer gaming and net surfing to vegging out in front of the TV. That pattern of use is likely to stay the same as they age.

What is clear that at the moment is that Google is still the business to beat.

Its competitors are trying everything they can think of to chip away at its hold and all want to find the chink in its armour that lets them in and helps them make more than 10 cents for every click.

But for that, the search continues.

Source: BBC News


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