Searches increased 11 percent compared to February, when 18.3 billion searches were recorded by comScore. A month after hitting its highest U.S.search market share in February (67.5 percent), Google saw both Bing and Yahoo steal away what...
After reaching 67 percent for the first time in November and repeating the feat in January, Google has topped its own record and strengthened its market share stranglehold, comScorereported. In February 2012, Google’s share of the U.S.searches was...
Google hit the unprecedented search market share of 67 percent for the first time in November 2012, then dipped slightly to 66.7 percent in December, only to rebound to 67 percent in January, comScorereported.
Google couldn’t grow its record-breaking U.S.search market share beyond 67 percent in December, comScorereported. In November, Google claimed an unprecedented 67 percent market share of searches conducted at home and work.
Slowly but surely, Google continues to close in on 70 percent market share, moving up 0.1 percent again this month to take a U.S.record 67 percent of all search traffic in November, comScorereported.
In October, Google smashed its own search engine market share record, accounting for 66.9 percent of all searches conducted in the U.S.comScorereported. Google-powered organic searches grew to 69.5 percent in October, up from 69.4 percent in...
He developed a custom quantifier dubbed Google Organic Click Turbulence, or GOCT, using comScore Search Planner data, to measure negative changes in Google organic clicks. Cazier then removed non-US TLDs from their dataset and used comScore’s...
ComScore’s figured reflect searches from Home The first enhancement is the incorporation of updated demographic universe estimates based on data from the 2010 U.S.census, which provides an improved accounting of the percentage of the population...
ComScore’s figures reflect only “Home searches, not mobile. Meanwhile, Google held steady, duplicating its record share of the search market, while Yahoo held steady after 10 months of declines, comScorereported.
Google-powered organic searches grew to 69 percent in June, up from 68.9 percent in May, while Bing-powered searches remained steady at 25.6 percent, comScorereported. Google further increased its already dominant share of the U.S.search engine...
For May, comScorereported Bing-powered searches fell slightly to 25.6 percent, down from 25.9 in April. Google increased its stranglehold on the U.S.search engine market, reaching a record high in May, according to the latest comScore report.
For April, comScorereported Bing-powered searches held steady, accounting for 25.9 percent of all searches, but still nowhere near the 68.7 percent of searchesGoogle powered in April. Speaking of Google, the dominant search engine saw slight gain...
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...
Yahoo’s slice of the U.S.search engine market continued to evaporate in February reaching a new low, according to comScore's latest figures. Google has also seen its share of searches increase for three straight months.
Google’s Distinguished Engineer Matt Cutts, in a blog post, reported that the “Page Layout algorithmic improvement” will effect 1 percent of searches globally – which is no small number considering Google powers at least 3 billion searches per day...
In addition, comScorereported that Google Sites, driven primarily by video viewing at YouTube.com, ranked as the top online video content property in October 2011 with 161 million unique viewers. A year earlier, comScorereported that Google Sites...
Over the past year, Amazon has consistently handled between three to four times as many product-related searches on its site as Google does through its product-search service, according to research firm comScore Inc.the Wall Street Journal noted.
The latest comScore search engine rankings for October largely tell the same old story, with Google’s continued dominance. Search Engine Rankings from comScore The search engine rankings for October 2011, according to comScore, were:
As reported in the Comscore mobile reports in October, 6.8 percent of all U.S. Important Mobile Stat #2: Market shares of top mobile platforms accessing the Web (Comscore, October 2011) Important Mobile Stat #5: According to a Google 2010 study...
As of July, Android now commands 41.8 percent of the U.S.smartphone market share, according to comScore; Android also recently passed iOS in Europe, and now has a 22.3 percent share of smartphone users, trailing Symbian’s 37.8 percent share...