Ask’s search market share grew to 2.7 percent in March (up from 2.6 percent in February), while AOL fell to 1.6 percent (down from 1.7 percent). February), followed by Microsoft sites with 3.4 billion (up 13 percent), Yahoo sites with 2.4 billion...
Google will take 73.7 percent of U.S.search ad revenues, while Microsoft will reach 9.3 percent, Yahoo will have 6.2 percent, and AOL will account for 1.1 percent. Twitter is forecast to surpass AOL by 2014 and Microsoft by 2015.
Google sites led the way with 12.3 billion searches (down 6 percent) followed by Microsoft sites with 3 billion searches (down 6 percent), Yahoo sites with 2.1 billion (down 5 percent), Ask Network with 475 million (down 11 percent), and AOL with...
Data in AOL contains web and image searches (powered by Google), video (powered by Blinkx), News, Shopping, Maps, and Yellow Pages (powered by various providers). AOL's Hottest Searches: Bedbugs, Tiger Woods, BP
Google sites led the way with 13.1 billion searches (up 11 percent) followed by Microsoft sites with 3.2 billion searches (up 12 percent), Yahoo sites with 2.3 billion (up 9 percent), Ask Network with 536 million, and AOL with 331 million (up 7...
With 3 percent market share, Ask remained unchanged in December, while AOL’s share of searches grew to 1.8 percent, up from 1.7 percent in November. Google captured 11.8 billion (up 4 percent); Bing accounted for 2.9 billion (up 5 percent); Yahoo...
AOL puts entire original video on YouTube
comScore data reveals video content reaches 188 million US viewers In terms of local, according to Google, 20 percent of all Google searches had local intent and 40 percent of Google mobile searches have...
Yahoo dropped a tenth of a percentage point to 12.1 percent, while Ask.com and AOL.com also saw slight drops – to 3 percent (down from 3.2 percent) and 1.7 percent respectively (down from 1.8 percent).
In recent years, search market share has remained mostly unchanged – for much of the world, it’s Google followed by every other search engine (in the U.S.the “Big 5” search engines consist of Google, Bing, Yahoo, Ask.com and AOL, which combine for...
Ask accounted for 3.2 percent of searches in October (down from 3.5 percent in September) and AOL held steady from September to October at 1.8 percent. Google led the way with 11.8 billion searches (up from 10.9 billion in September); Bing was...
Searches with a mapping/navigation intent on the Big 5 Engines (Google/Bing/Yahoo/Ask/AOL) are down 34 percent over the past 15 months, going from 74.8 million to 49.5 million in August. As desktop-based searches with mapping intent and search...
AOL also moved up slightly, marking the first deviation from their constant 1.5 percent with an increase to 1.7 percent. Yahoo was again in third place and unchanged, at 2.2 billion; Ask grew slightly with 550 million (up from 548 million) and AOL...
Google led the way with 11.8 billion searches (up from 11.4 billion in June); second-place Bing accounted for 2.7 billion (up from 2.6 billion in June); Yahoo was third at 2.2 billion (unchanged); Ask was fourth with 548 million searches (up from...
Google led the way with 11.4 billion searches (down from 11.7 billion in May); Bing was second with 2.7 billion searches (unchanged from May); Yahoo was third with 2.2 billion searches (down from 2.3 billion in May); Ask was fourth with 516...
Google ranked first with 11.7 billion searches (up from 11.4 billion in April); Bing was 2.7 billion (up from 2.6 billion); Yahoo with 2.3 billion (same as April); Ask with 521 million (up from 511 million); and AOL with 268 million (down from 271...
AOLAOL’s organic results are powered by Google, so don’t expect to find Nextag here. But AOL also pushes those organic results well below the fold thanks to a large stack of ads, as well as AOL shopping results.
A different network then Advertise.com, Advertising.com actually falls under the AOL umbrella and offers decent traffic at a low CPC. This includes tool bar searches, Internet yellow pages (IYPs), parked domains and many other networks.
Despite not having a true web search engine, 336 million searches were conducted on Facebook in February, which was good for ninth place in the U.S.behind Google, Bing, Yahoo, Ask, AOL, eBay, Craigslist, and Amazon, according to comScore.
Google ranked first with 11.4 billion searches (down from 12.2 billion in March); Bing with 2.6 billion (down from 2.8 billion); Yahoo with 2.3 billion (down from 2.5 billion); Ask with 511 million (down from 555 million); and AOL with 271 million...
In February, Facebook searches numbered 336 million, trailing all of the “big five” search engines (Google, Bing, Yahoo, Ask, AOL), while sites like eBay, Craigslist, and Amazon saw more search queries than Facebook, according to comScore data...