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 essentially amounts to crumbs from the giant pie that is Google's dominance, according to comScore.
It is worth noting that comScore’s doesn’t include Twitter’s Vine app, which lets marketers create and share short looping videos that are six seconds long. ComScore Video Metrix reported that 178 million Americans watched 33 billion online content...
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.
A 2010 report by ComScore suggests that display and video ads can increase brand-related search queries by up to 3 times! Over the last few years most print publications have been busy trying to find ways to win back their share of the digital market.
Earlier this week, the comScore Video Metrix service released data showing that 182 million U.S. Powered by YouTube, VEVO became the most visited US web network in the Entertainment-Music category in its first month of existence with 35.4 million...
Google couldn’t grow its record-breaking U.S.search market share beyond 67 percent in December, comScorereported. Meanwhile, Bing continued its incremental gains, as Yahoo’s share grew for the first time in longer than a year.
Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, and Poland were the other countries listed by comScore as the territories where Facebook doesn’t command the greatest market share but even in its own back yard, Facebook shouldn't rest on its laurels.
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. ComScore provided the data used to measure organic clicks, from a global...
Microsoft’s search engine increased its market share from 15.7 percent to 15.9 percent, comScorereported. ComScore’s figured reflect searches from Home The first enhancement is the incorporation of updated demographic universe estimates based on...
Meanwhile, Google held steady, duplicating its record share of the search market, while Yahoo held steady after 10 months of declines, comScorereported. ComScore’s figures reflect only “Home searches, not mobile.
Google further increased its already dominant share of the U.S.search engine market in June, topping its own record set in May, according to comScore. Google-powered organic searches grew to 69 percent in June, up from 68.9 percent in May, while...
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.
Yahoo’s share of the U.S.search engine market continued to further dwindle in April, continuing a downward slide that began eight months ago in September, according to comScore – though Experian Hitwise paints a somewhat different picture.
Citing a recent comScore Core Search custom report, Microsoft revealed in their rebranding announcement that unique searchers on Bing and Yahoo Search are likely to spend 26 percent more than the average searcher and 9 percent more than those...
Some preliminary comScore figures floating around yesterday appeared to show that Yahoo’s share dropped again in March to its lowest point ever – from 13.8 percent to 13.7 percent; that's down from 16.1 percent in March 2011.
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 and Bing both saw gains, with Google nearly matching its highest recorded search share (in December...
A new Localeze/15miles Fifth Annual comScore Local Search Usage Study also shows that tablets are an important player in the purchase cycle, with 86 percent of tablet users reporting they had made a purchase from their most recent tablet-based...