Posts Tagged ‘comScore Video Metrix’

comScore Releases January 2010 U.S. Search Engine Rankings

Friday, February 12th, 2010

RESTON, VA, February 11, 2010 – comScore, Inc. (NASDAQ: SCOR), a leader in measuring the digital world, today released its monthly comScore qSearch analysis of the U.S. search marketplace. In January 2010, Americans conducted 15.2 billion core searches, with Google Sites accounting for 65.4 percent search market share. Microsoft Sites grabbed 11.3 percent market share, up 0.6 percentage points versus December.

January 2010 U.S. Core Search Rankings

Google Sites led the U.S. core search market in January with 65.4 percent of the searches conducted, followed by Yahoo! Sites (17.0 percent), and Microsoft Sites (11.3 percent). Ask Network captured 3.8 percent of the search market, followed by AOL LLC with 2.5 percent.

comScore Core Search Report*
January 2010 vs. December 2009
Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations
Source: comScore qSearch
Core Search Entity Share of Searches (%)
Dec-09 Jan-10 Point Change Jan-10 vs. Dec-09
Total Core Search 100.0% 100.% N/A
Google Sites 65.7% 65.4% -0.3
Yahoo! Sites 17.3% 17.0% -0.3
Microsoft Sites 10.7% 11.3% 0.6
Ask Network 3.7% 3.8% 0.1
AOL LLC Network 2.6% 2.5% -0.1

* Based on the five major search engines including partner searches and cross-channel searches. Searches for mapping, local directory, and user-generated video sites that are not on the core domain of the five search engines are not included in the core search numbers.

Americans conducted 15.2 billion searches in January, up 3 percent from December. Google Sites accounted for 9.9 billion searches, followed by Yahoo! Sites (2.6 billion), Microsoft Sites (1.7 billion), Ask Network (574 million) and AOL LLC (375 million).

comScore Core Search Report*
January 2010 vs. December 2009
Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations
Source: comScore qSearch
Core Search Entity Search Queries (MM)
Dec-09 Jan-10 Percent Change Jan-10 vs. Dec-09
Total Core Search 14,737 15,167 3%
Google Sites 9,688 9,920 2%
Yahoo! Sites 2,544 2,583 2%
Microsoft Sites 1,576 1,715 9%
Ask Network 545 574 5%
AOL LLC 383 375 -2%

* Based on the five major search engines including partner searches and cross-channel searches. Searches for mapping, local directory, and user-generated video sites that are not on the core domain of the five search engines are not included in the core search numbers.

January 2010 U.S. Expanded Search Rankings

In the January analysis of the top properties where search activity is observed, Google Sites led the search market with more than 14 billion search queries, followed by Yahoo! Sites with 2.7 billion queries and Microsoft Sites with 1.8 billion searches. Bing experienced large growth during the month with an 11-percent increase in query volume to reach more than 1.5 billion searches. Craigslist jumped one position to #6 with 636 million searches, while Facebook grew to 395 million searches, representing a 13-percent increase from the previous month.

comScore Expanded Search Query Report
January 2010 vs. December 2009
Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations
Source: comScore qSearch
Expanded Search Entity Search Queries (MM)
Dec-09 Jan-10 Percent Change Jan-10 vs. Dec-09
Total Internet 22,741 23,163 2%
Google Sites 14,019 14,045 0%
Google 10,101 10,378 3%
YouTube/All Other 3,918 3,667 -6%
Yahoo! Sites 2,629 2,670 2%
Yahoo! 2,605 2,647 2%
All Other 24 23 -4%
Microsoft Sites 1,620 1,772 9%
Bing 1,399 1,549 11%
Microsoft/All Other 221 223 1%
Ask Network 696 736 6%
ASK.COM 332 336 1%
MyWebSearch.com/ All Other 364 400 10%
eBay 680 659 -3%
craigslist, inc. 583 636 9%
AOL LLC 588 576 -2%
AOL Search Network 325 317 -2%
MapQuest/All Other 263 259 -2%
Fox Interactive Media 424 403 -5%
MySpace Sites 416 398 -4%
All Other 8 5 -38%
Facebook.com 351 395 13%
Amazon Sites 302 238 -21%

About comScore
comScore, Inc. (NASDAQ: SCOR) is a global leader in measuring the digital world and preferred source of digital marketing intelligence. For more information, please visit www.comscore.com/companyinfo.

5 steps to a manageable video strategy

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Video content has a good chance of dominating the web. In July 2009 alone, an astounding 158 million U.S. internet users — or 80 percent of the nation’s online population — watched online videos, according to data from comScore Video Metrix. While the best way to meet this demand is to provide more video content, it should be noted that too much content will become an “untamable beast” — especially when it comes to ensuring that videos are personalized and customized.

In addition, according to recent research from The Diffusion Group (TDG), the number of global broadband households will near 440 million by 2010 and top 1.2 billion by 2030, bringing high-speed connectivity to a tipping point. As a result, online publishers will treat this broadband gold rush with gusto, ensuring that video content is prolific and ubiquitous.

So, the stars are all lining up for video to be the “king of content” on the web. Online publishers will post massive volumes of videos that are aimed at driving more traffic, and they will look to provide a more personalized experience to keep users engaged. The downside is that there is such as thing as too much of a good thing when it comes to video, and online publishers need to use tools to maximize this opportunity.

Once online publishers start building out a deep repertoire of video content by producing it, licensing it, or syndicating it, this massive volume of videos can become unwieldy and cumbersome to discover, share, and monetize. In addition, a haphazard approach to posting content — just based on posting high volumes of videos — would be like selling a product that people don’t buy because they don’t know it exists or have no interest in it.

To avoid being trampled under the foot of this potentially untamable beast, we recommend you follow these five critical steps:

1. Think strategically
Take a marketing campaign-like approach to posting video content. The most successful campaigns are driven by a well-thought-out strategy that is supported by the most cutting-edge tactics. Online publishers that actually spend time developing this plan in a written document, and ensure that the entire web team is thinking strategically while executing the tactics, will yield the best results.

2. Scale up quick and early
Scaling up can always be done, but is optimal when completed early in the game. By tagging and managing the videos by category — even if the categories go very deep in terms of user preference — you will be able to build a true foundation for all other videos to be launched, managed, and monetized. This will also allow third-party technology vendors to more easily be integrated to your site (in terms of analytics, third-party ad serving companies, discovery, and others).

3. Provide a personalized experience; create your competitive advantage
Make sure you serve up a more personalized video viewing experience. This means that, based on viewing patterns, tastes, and preferences, videos should be served up to users much like a custom-made piece of furniture or musical instrument — as unique products. Too much of a commoditized video experience will cause users to migrate elsewhere. Simply put: Web users prefer some guidance.

4. Maintain, maintain, maintain
If you have the right foundation in place and you are scaling properly, it is very easy to get complacent at precisely the time when managing online videos can become beastly. Make sure that you build in routine maintenance of your online video efforts.

5. Measure success and recalculate
Managing online video content without the proper analytic tools and metrics goals is like going hiking without the proper equipment. One wrong turn and you could be lost very deep in the woods. Be sure to fully analyze and measure all of your efforts at the end of a campaign (recommend every three months). This is the ideal time to truly recalculate efforts, purge low-value video content, and move forward with a modified plan. Such quantifiable metrics could be CTRs on your different navigation tools, colors schemes, player sizes, pages per visit, and others.

While the online video gold rush is showing no sign of slowing down and more ad revenues are kicking in from TV to online, publishers should avoid quickly rushing out West — much like the California gold rush — with the wrong tools for mining. After all, only a handful of people struck it rich during the gold rush — most were left destitute. By using the right strategies and tools for managing and personalizing videos, every online publisher can grab a hold of the bountiful riches.

–Adam Singolda