More Relevant Results: Google or Bing?

Remember when Bing launched its recipe results? Now Google has launched a similar feature with recipe rich snippets. “For example, if you were searching for an easy to make thai mango salad, you can now see user ratings, preparation time, and a picture of the dish directly in search result snippets,” explains Google. It may not be incredibly far-fetched to suggest that maybe Bing’s offering nudged such a feature into development, whether or not Google would admit this. This story isn’t about recipes though. It’s about the major search engines’ quest for gaining or keeping you as a user. It feels like Bing has been around quite a while know, but in reality, it hasn’t even been out for a year. Right out of the box, Bing seemed to make Google want to improve . Google is even in the process of testing redesigned search results pages that borrow some design characteristics from Bing. Where are You Getting the More Relevant Results? Talk to ArisYulianta and Friends… . Both Google and Bing still have their relevancy issues. We recently looked at an example of a query for “matt cutts” on Google (though we compared them to Yahoo rather than Bing, as Yahoo mentioned the same query in a blog post). Frankly, Google’s results left a bit to be desired. It wasn’t that that they were bad exactly, but personalized results pushed the more relevant results further down the page , and Matt’s Facebook profile was MIA, despite Facebook being one of the most popular sites on the web, a good result for a search on a person’s name (It was in the first few on Yahoo’s results). Microsoft may like consumers to think that Bing gives all the right answers. Those commercials would certainly seem to suggest they have a leg up over the competition in that regard, but they’ve got their own relevance issues. For example, for an article I was writing recently, I was looking for that site Bing has that showed all of the latest features they’ve released. I couldn’t remember the name of it, so I searched (on Bing) for “latest bing features”. Given Bing’s philosophy of wanting to provide answers, I would expect to easily find what I was looking for through such a query, but instead the first organic result is an article called “The Latest News from Bing” from November of 2009. Search Diversifying In the latest search market reports , Google has lost a little bit of market share. Bing is gaining (and has the potential to gain a lot more for reasons discussed here ). Another thing Bing has going for it, or Google has working against it rather, is that search itself is becoming much more diversified as a result of mobile , social media , and geo-location . People are simply using more ways to find the information they’re looking for. It’s not that they’re not using Google anymore. It’s that they’re maybe using it less for certain types of queries. For example, where someone may have once used Google to search for a movie showtime, maybe they now have an app for that on their phone. Is a Bingized Yahoo Good for Yahoo Search? At some point in the near future, Bing’s results will be taking over Yahoo’s results to some extent. While most will agree that the Microsoft-Yahoo deal will be good for search advertising . Another question would be is it good for people who use Yahoo to search? Are Bing’s search results better than Yahoo’s? I’m not so sure, looking at the “matt cutts” example. For the “latest bing features” example, however, I can’t say that Yahoo’s results are really any better than Bing’s. I realize that just looking at a couple of examples is kind of grasping at straws and are hardly representative of all queries in general, but it’s still a question worth pondering. Are Bing’s results better than Yahoo’s? Does it even matter? Will the average Yahoo user even notice a difference? Google’s Edge in Innovation Google still seems to have the edge in getting out new and interesting features. Take real-time search. Microsoft and Google both announced deals with Twitter around the same time. Microsoft even had one with Facebook too. While Bing had a separate destination relatively quickly, where users could search Twitter with Bing, they didn’t integrate real-time Twitter results into Bing results themselves. Google did this after a little while with not only Twitter, but many other sources to make up its real-time search results. Just this week, Bing announced that it is starting to include such results , and only from Twitter, and only to a small subset of users in the U.S. That’s not to say that Bing doesn’t do some things first (like the recipes for example), but Bing has a lot more to prove (and in all fairness, they do regularly release new features ). Google is already established. Bing is still trying to win people over. Google is frequently making acquisitions to better its search technologies. Just this week, Google acquired Pink , to better its Google Goggles product , which lets people search with their phones by simply pointing their cameras toward an object. They recently acquired Aardvark , a social Q&A search service (a space that is growing rapidly – see AnswerBag/MerchantCircle news for one of the latest examples). Wrapping Up With regards to relevance, you’re going to find better results on Google, Yahoo, and Bing on a query-by-query basis. In reality, none of them deliver perfect results all the time, and that is why the diversifying of how people search is likely to continue, and for the better. The search engines can work to personalize results all they want, but in the end, it’s the user that personalizes how they search, and right now, it’s not

Tags: Bing, commercials, consumers, design characteristics, Matt Cutts, Microsoft, phone, preparation time, recipes, Relevance, search engine, Search Engines, search result

Bing Just Now Starting Real-Time Search (Twitter) Integration

Microsoft announced today that Bing now pulls in tweets from Twitter in real-time, in a way that somewhat resembles Google’s real-time search feature. Twitter and Bing integration is not exactly new. Last summer, Bing began including tweets from certain people in some searches, though it was anything but real-time. Later in the fall, Bing announced a deal with Twitter giving Bing access to tweets. Bing set up Bing.com/twitter , where users could search Twitter in real-time from Bing, but it was not integrated to Bing’s regular search results. Now Bing has introduced its “social search” feature, which Bing’s Lawrence Kim describes : Bing now pulls in social content generated on Twitter to surface the most relevant updates within seconds of a breaking news event. From people on the ground tweeting about what’s happening around them to users sharing interesting news links while browsing at home, the Twitterati can be significantly faster than traditional media outlets in picking up information on breaking events. Further, the Twitterati also picks up information that the traditional media outlets often ignore – such as the latest viral video being shared online. At Bing, we analyze what topics are generating the most interest on Twitter to bring you the latest and most interesting content. So if you wanted to find out more information on the just-announced Kin phone from Microsoft, you’ll be able to discover it on Bing as the announcement was being made and journalists started tweeting about the product. There’s no word yet on whether or not Bing will integrate Twitter’s newly announced Promoted Tweets in its social search feature. Bing is however, also using Twitter data to show users the most popular shared links for navigational queries. If a user looks for the most popular celebrity news on TMZ, for example, they’ll see which links from TMZ people are sharing the most on Twitter. The new features are being tested with a small subset of Bing users and queries at this point, but the company says they will become widely available in the U.S. soon. By the way, here’s how Bing ranks tweets .

Tags: celebrity news, interesting news, Lawrence Kim, Microsoft, news links, promoted-tweets, real-time search, search feature, time search, whether-or-not

Google, Microsoft, Amazon Protest Data Center Standard

Some of the world’s top tech companies are concerned that their ability to build cost-effective and energy-efficient data centers may be compromised.

Tags: companies, data centers, dupont, efficient system, energy efficiency, Microsoft, Technology, use-economizers, whether-or-not

Yahoo Arranges Transfer Of 200 Employees To Microsoft

Although it’s unlikely that anyone’s printing up new business cards just yet, it looks like Microsoft and Yahoo have decided how to deal with the post-partnership personnel situation in at least one country.

Tags: Amp, business cards, ceo, exec, Microsoft, microsoft-yahoo deal, mukherjee, partnership

Bing Launches Maps Apps for World Tour, Oodle, Foursquare

Microsoft launched a few new apps for Bing Maps today: the World Tour App , the Oodle App and the Foursquare App . “Just about every month, Bing Maps gets a makeover in the form of new map imagery for locations worldwide,” a representative for Bing tells WebProNews. “The World Tour map app brings these updates to life using the Bing Map Apps framework, Silverlight and Azure.” “Oodle.com, one of the fastest growing classifieds services is creating an app that will map rental housing on Bing Maps which will be available today,” he says. “The Oodle Rentals app will pull-in Oodle data, allowing users to look at various rental housing available from Oodle.com.” “Last week at SES New York, we announced our partnership with foursquare and plans to roll out the foursquare Everywhere app on Bing Maps in the coming weeks,” he notes. “Today, the app will be live and ready for use.” That’s not all Microsoft announced for Bing at SES. They also announced an update to the Bing user interface, which adapts the page and search results based on the intent of the query. “We’ll be testing a new user interface that includes new design concepts that move the Quick Tabs functionality to the top of the screen, so customers see a more visual and organized page,” the company said. They also announced a new search experience for autos. For more info on these updates, watch our coverage of Microsoft’s SES keynote and our exclusive interview with Bing Director Stefan Weitz.

Tags: Bing, director, Microsoft, partnership, using-the-bing, weitz, world map, world-tour