WebProNews

Tag: Bing

  • Bing Partners With TripAdvisor To Offer Hotel Info, Reviews In Search Results

    Bing Partners With TripAdvisor To Offer Hotel Info, Reviews In Search Results

    Before you leave on any trip, it’s probably wise to search for hotels ahead of time. You might even want to book a room while you’re at it. It was already easy enough to do so with the numerous online tools at your disposal, but it will even easier for Bing users thanks to a new partnership.

    Bing announced today that it has partnered with TripAdvisor to offer hotel information, reviews and more directly in search results. By using the recently released Smart Search on Windows 8.1, Bing users searching for hotels will be greeted by not only locations on Bing maps, but information pulled directly from the TripAdvisor app as well.

    Here’s what it will look like:

    Bing Partners With TripAdvisor

    To see TripAdvisor information in Bing Smart Search, you’ll have to install the TripAdvisor app for Windows 8. You can grab it here.

    If you don’t use Windows 8 or just prefer the Web version of Bing, you’ll probably be pleased to know that TripAdvisor information has been worked into Bing for the Web as well. Whenever you search for hotels on Bing.com, you’ll see information from TripAdvisor on the left.

    Here’s what it will look like:

    Bing Partners With TripAdvisor

    With this new partnership, Bing obviously hopes that you’ll make all your trip-related searches through its services. Its hopes might not be fully realized on the Web, but Smart Search in Windows 8.1 may just be the golden ticket it needs to get into the lives of more people.

    [Image: Bing Search Blog]

  • Bing Shopping Is Now A Thing Of The Past

    Bing Shopping Is Now A Thing Of The Past

    If you try to go to Bing Shopping at Bing.com/shopping, you’ll now be redirected to the Bing homepage. Microsoft has officially pulled the plug on the service.

    Back in August, Bing announced the launch of a new product search experience, utilizing tens of millions of products, along with machine learning, to show products on the main results page, rather than making users go to a dedicated Shopping page.

    Bing said users would continue to see the Bing Shopping destination during the transition, but the transition now appears to be over.

    The new format looks vaguely similar to Google’s Knowledge Carousel.

    New bing shopping experience

    [h/t: Barry Schwartz]

  • Here’s How Bing Works On Xbox One

    Here’s How Bing Works On Xbox One

    In just a few days, Microsoft will officially enter the next-generation arena with the Xbox One. While the majority of the console’s focus will be on games, Microsoft will also use the console to push its own services, including Bing.

    In a blog post today on the Bing blog, Stefan Weitz, Senior Director at Bing, details how Bing search will work on the Xbox One. In short, it’ll mostly work like it does on Windows 8, but with the added ability to voice search via Kinect. For example, you can tell Bing to look for a specific TV show or movie and it will instantly bring it up. You can also use Bing to search through various genres of film and TV shows.

    As for games, Bing will help gamers find titles that they’re interested in. For instance, you can use Bing to look up a video game genre, like action-adventure. You can also use Bing to bring up a specific game’s page with the video below demonstrating how you can have Bing take you to the Forza Motorsport 5 page by simply saying, “I want to download Forza Motorsport 5.”

    Bing on Xbox One from Bing on Vimeo.

    While Bing on the Xbox 360 never really amounted to much, it looks like Microsoft deeply incorporated the service into the Xbox One’s user interface. That’s only a good thing as Microsoft is able to use the Xbox One as a trojan horse of sorts to get Bing into more homes.

    Of course, the big question now is whether or not Bing integration on the Xbox One will lead to more people using Bing on the Web. It will be interesting to find out if that becomes the case, but we may never find out if Microsoft decides to hire Stephen Elop as its new CEO.

    [Image: Bing/Vimeo]

  • Bing Lets You Connect Social Pages To Webmaster Tools

    Bing Lets You Connect Social Pages To Webmaster Tools

    Bing announced a new Connected Pages feature for its Webmaster Tools offering, enabling webmasters to connect their various other official pages to their account, and track how users are getting to them.

    You can now connect your pages from Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, Windows Store, Google Play, Apple Store, Pinterest, Windows Phone Store, YouTube, Instagram and MySpace.

    Bing Connected Pages

    “Now, in addition to the current data you have access to on your own website(s), you can also claim official social pages, connect them to your account and see similar data as it relates to those connected locations,” writes Bing Sr. Product Manager Duane Forrester. “Ever wonder which keyword are sending traffic to your official Facebook page? Curious to know who’s linking to your Twitter page? Well, now you’ll know.”

    “Currently, you can connect a wide range of page types to your verified website, provided that they contain a link that points back to your verified website (the main URL), or at a minimum – a page that lives on your main website,” says Forrester. “We won’t ask you to enter any passwords or provide us with any extended permissions to your social media accounts to establish this connection, but the link inside the connected page needs to match in the sense that the link needs to point back to the root of or a sub-page within your verified website. Obviously, to check this, we also need to be able to extract the link from each of the connected pages, so the page needs to be accessible from the web and not block our verifier in any way.”

    The feature is available to users immediately, though it will take up to 72 hours for Bing Webmaster Tools to start populating the data related to Connected Pages.

    Image: Bing

  • Could Microsoft Soon Give Bing The Axe?

    Former Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, who is one of the top candidates in a recently narrowed down list to take over Steve Ballmer’s job as Microsoft CEO, would reportedly consider killing Bing and selling the company’s Xbox business.

    Should Microsoft get of rid of Bing? Xbox? Let us know what you think in the comments.

    That is according to a new report from Bloomberg, citing people with “knowledge of this thinking.” Elop would reportedly want to narrow this company’s focus, and get rid of distractions. Peter Burrows & Dina Bass report:

    Besides emphasizing Office, Elop would be prepared to sell or shut down major businesses to sharpen the company’s focus, the people said. He would consider ending Microsoft’s costly effort to take on Google with its Bing search engine, and would also consider selling healthy businesses such as the Xbox game console if he determined they weren’t critical to the company’s strategy, the people said.

    Earlier this week, investors drove Microsoft shares to their highest price since mid-2000, after Nomura Holdings Inc. analyst Rick Sherlund said the sale of Bing and Xbox, along with other moves, could lift fiscal 2015 earnings by 40 percent.

    Elop came over to Microsoft when the company announced its intent to buy Nokia’s phones unit a couple months ago. He had worked for Microsoft previously, and his name was already being thrown around a lot as a candidate for Ballmer’s replacement. He stepped aside as Nokia President and CEO to become Nokia Vice President of Devices & Services.

    A spokesperson called Bloomberg’s report a “foray into fiction,” but it’s not like even Microsoft’s PR has a window to Elop’s brain. It’s unclear how these people with “knowledge of his thinking” do, but it’s not outside of the realm of possibility that there’s something to the report.

    We won’t delve much into the Xbox side of things here (though that’s a interesting story in itself), but everybody knows that Bing has been an incredibly expensive venture for Microsoft, and has made little gain in terms of search market share against Google.

    Last month, Microsoft did report 25% growth in its online services division, which includes Bing. The loss fell 12%.

    Peter Bright at Ars Technica, who challenges the legitimacy of the Bloomberg report to begin with, writes, “As a standalone business, Bing is heading in the right direction but for the time being, it is still a money pit. Getting rid of it would improve Microsoft’s finances to the tune of about a billion dollars and change each year, something around a five percent improvement in operating income.”

    “The problem with this superficial analysis is that Bing isn’t a standalone business,” he adds. “I’m sure Microsoft would be happier if it could stand alone—if nothing else, it would help put an end to the ‘Microsoft should get rid of Bing’ chatter—but there’s more to the value and importance of Bing than just the bottom line.”

    He goes on to make the case that Microsoft essentially needs Bing for the data, and for feature integration into its operating systems to compete with Google and Apple. This is certainly a valid point as Android and iOS continue to get smarter.

    It’s true that Microsoft needs to have the kind of personal connection to users that Google and Apple (especially Google) are able to get by other means. Search is obviously a major component of such a connection. Social is another, however, and with Bing, Microsoft gets a special window into the Facebook and Twitter realms that Google does not, thanks to the companies’ partnerships (Bing and Twitter just renewed their’s).

    And if Microsoft killed Bing, where would that leave Yahoo?

    It is worth noting that Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen also reportedly thinks Microsoft should get rid of Xbox and Bing.

    What do you think? Is Bing helping or hurting Microsoft? Do you think Microsoft should consider getting rid of it? Let us know in the comments.

    Image: Flickr (Wikimedia Commons)

  • Bing Updates How It Displays Music Videos

    Bing Updates How It Displays Music Videos

    Bing has introduced a new music video search experience that users can take advantage of by searching for an artist from Bing’s video search.

    If you search for “Justin Timberlake,” for example, you’ll be presented with a number of Justin’s music videos from Google’s YouTube with a few other sources like Dailymotion, Vimeo and Tudou sprinkled in.

    Bing Music Video Search

    “Built from the ground up to make it easier for you to access the best music videos available on the web, our new music video experience was designed with music lovers in mind,” Bing’s Ryan Becker and Deepak Santham write in a blog post. “Whether you’re looking for videos of songs and artists you are already familiar with (like Led Zeppelin and Justin Timberlake) or you’re looking to discover the next-up-and-coming artist or revisiting the classics, we’ve got you covered.”

    “Let’s say you’re searching for Tighten Up by the Black Keys,” they add. “You will see the most popular video showcased in the top-left of the screen. Harnessing Bing’s machine learning capabilities, the most relevant and popular music video for an artist, album or song is showcased in the upper right of the screen. Because we know that quality videos don’t just come from one place, we showcase videos from leading sites including YouTube, Vimeo, MTV, Artist Direct and more. Instead of making you click through to a site to see if a video is the one you want, you can simply mouse over the thumbnail to see a preview. If you like what you’re hearing, simply click on the button to play the full version.”

    Included in the experience is the top results section, which showcases popular and official music videos, related songs and albums from over 70,000 artists. Bing will also attempt to assemble the tracks from a particular album in the order. The related artist sidebar has gotten an upgrade as well.

    Image: Bing

  • Twitter And Bing Renew Search Deal

    Twitter And Bing Renew Search Deal

    Bing announced today that it has renewed its search deal with Twitter, which provides tweets in search results for a “near real-time” experience.

    Bing had this to say in a blog post:

    At Bing, we believe that for every search there is somebody out there who can help. That’s why we have been teaming up with Twitter for a few years to surface public tweets from people who may have something to contribute to what you’re trying to get done with Bing.

    Whether it’s a politician, celebrity, thought leader or friend, our renewed partnership with Twitter ensures that you have near real-time access to what people are tweeting tailored to what you’re searching for.

    As you may know, Google used to have a similar deal with Twitter, but that fell apart a few years ago, around the time when Google was getting Google+ off the ground. Google search has suffered as a result.

  • Bing Has An Amazing Halloween Homepage

    Bing Has An Amazing Halloween Homepage

    For major holidays, the Google Doodle usually outshines whatever Bing does it for its homepage. For Halloween this year, Google certainly impressed with a witchy doodle, but Bing is the definitive winner this year.

    For this year, Bing outfitted its home page with an interactive haunted house full of odes to classic horror movies. Here’s what it looks like normally:

    Bing References Al The Great Horror Classics In Its Halloween Homepage

    Now here’s an example of what happens when you find one of the interactive elements:

    Bing References All The Great Horror Classics In Its Halloween Homepage

    There are six interactive elements in all with references to The Shining, Poltergeist, Psycho, Friday the 13th, Halloween and The Amityville Horror. Upon finding each of these elements, you are directed to click through the search page for the film in question.

    Now this is where things get awesome.

    Bing has created a custom search page for each film complete with an animated banner and trivia. Check ’em out below:

    Poltergeist

    Poltergeist

    The Shining

    The Shining

    Psycho

    Psycho

    Friday the 13th

    Friday the 13th

    Halloween

    Halloween

    The Amityville Horror

    Bing Has An Amazing Halloween Homepage

    It’s safe to say that Bing wins the homepage war for Halloween this year. If Bing can keep this kind of stuff up for other holidays, it may just have something special on its hands.

    As a personal aside, Bing should make a Christmas homepage like this featuring Santa Claus Conquers The Martians – just a suggestion.

    [Image: Bing]

  • Bing Hero Ads: Microsoft’s Answer To Those New Google Branded Search Ads?

    Last week, there was a lot of talk about a new ad format Google is testing that essentially places a banner-like graphic near the top of a search results page when the user searches for that brand.

    While Google indicated that this was only a small test at this point, many immediately began criticizing Google for breaking a promise it made eight years ago to never have banner ads on search results pages.

    Not to be outdone, Bing has a new very visual ad style that it reportedly announced today at a Bing Ads event. The format is called “Bing Hero Ads”.

    Wordstream’s Larry Kim shares some pics from the presentation. Here’s one (click over to see the others):

    Bing Hero Ads

    It looks like these go well beyond what Google is doing with a software-like interface for what appear to essentially be sitelinks.

    “The pilot project is currently limited to searches conducted in Windows 8.1 in the US,” says Kim. “No word yet on if this will make it to the Web version of Bing Search. The test is being run with a limited number of big brands. If you don’t see them, it’s because they’re only show up on a subset of branded searches. Organic search listings appear on the next page, which is accessible by swiping the screen.”

    I would imagine we’ll be hearing more about these from Microsoft soon.

    Update: Here’s a post from Microsoft.

  • Here’s How Bing Smart Search Works In Windows 8.1

    Windows 8.1 is the first product to be delivered under the “One Microsoft” ideology that outgoing CEO Steve Ballmer referred to when outlining the company’s restructuring plan. In essence, all of the teams at Microsoft contributed to make Windows 8.1 an OS where every app contributes to the whole.

    As part of that, one of the teams to get a bigger role in Windows 8.1 was the Bing team. With Windows 8.1, they launched an all new search tool called Bing Smart Search that pervades every nook and cranny of the new operating system.

    So, you may now be wondering what exactly Bing Smart Search can do. The answer is quite a lot.

    First off, search has been streamlined whilst on the Start screen in Windows 8.1. You no longer have to hit a search button. Now, you just have to start typing and a search tab will automatically appear with results. When in desktop mode, you will have to first press the Windows key and then start typing to make the search tab appear. Interestingly enough, the Bing team says that some Windows 8 machines will soon have a dedicated search key.

    After you start searching, Bing Smart Search will bring you a number of results based upon what filters you have checked. If you allow it to search everywhere, it will bring up relevant results from the Web, settings, local files and files saved on SkyDrive.

    If you search only the Web, Bing Smart Search in Windows 8.1 will bring up a “summary of results pulled from the most relevant information across the Web and related apps.” What does that mean? To use Microsoft’s example, let’s say you’re searching for Marilyn Monroe. Upon completing the search, Windows 8.1 will not only display results from the Web, but it will also look through apps, like Wikipedia or The New York Times, to bring you relevant results pertaining to your search.

    Bing Smart Search also supports the improved multitasking feature so that you can have Bing Smart Search occupy one half of the screen while you work on something else on the other half. With Windows 8.1, you can have up to four apps open at once so you could potentially be searching for a list of rare He-Man toys, perusing He-Man toys on eBay in Internet Explorer 11, watching the original He-Man series on Windows Media Player and reading the He-Man comic all at once.

    For more on Bing Smart Search, check out the live demo below:

    Organize Your Digital Life from Bing on Vimeo.

    Bing Smart Search is now available as part of Windows 8.1 which is itself a free download on the Windows Store for Windows 8 users. You can find out more here.

    [Image: Bing]

  • Bing Talks Up Yahoo Bing Network Ahead Of Yahoo’s Earnings

    Yahoo will soon release its earnings report for the third quarter. Microsoft is taking the opportunity to provide an update on what’s happening with the Yahoo Bing Network.

    David Pann, general manager of the Microsoft Advertising Search Group, has written a blog post discussing recent features they’ve added to Bing Ads, performance updates and research from RKG.

    As noted, they’ve recently launched better local extensions, call extensions, Bing Ads Express and compatibility with Enhanced Campaigns.

    On a quarter-over-quarter basis, click-through-rates are up 6.8 percent, while cost-per-acquisition is down 13 percent, according to Pann.

    The aforementioned RKG research finds that advertiser spend on the Yahoo Bing Network continues to grow compared to Google. It’s up 39% year-over-year, while Google is up 18%.

    Pann writes, “A lot of that is driven by non-brand click growth, which is up 45 percent on Bing Ads due to investments in our marketplace algorithms. In addition, CPCs fell 2 percent overall as Bing Ads continues to drive improvements that benefit our advertisers. The report says ‘advertiser ROI has improved on Bing Ads even as the platform has been able to deliver big traffic increases with better ad-matching technology.’”

    Stay tuned for Yahoo’s numbers.

    Image: Bing

  • Bing Gets Snapshots From Klout In Search Results

    Klout announced an extension of its partnership with Bing today with the launch of Klout-verified snapshots in Bing search results.

    Klout’s Paul Kim and Genevieve Lydstone explain, “From the beginning of Klout, we’ve been focused on helping people better understand and be recognized for how they influence others. Through our ongoing partnership with Bing, we’ve been able to integrate search results into the Klout Score as a direct indicator of real world influence. Today we’re excited to announce that we’re taking another step in connecting search with influence by introducing Klout-verified Snapshots on Bing.”

    “Search is one of the most common ways that information about you is discovered by other people,” the add. “Snapshots on Bing enable anyone who signs up on Klout to verify and manage how they appear in Bing search results, based on their public social network profiles. You’ll now be able to easily share your professional accomplishments and highlights, as well as your most influential moments on Instagram and Twitter, when people search for you on Bing.”

    Here’s what it looks like:

    Klout in Bing

    It shows your public LinkedIn summary, links to your connected social profiles, displays your Klout score and influential topics, and two of your most influential public moments from Twitter over the past 7 days and Instagram over the past 90 days.

    If you’re a Klout user, and you want to get it set up, you can do so here.

    This is the latest product of Bing’s investment in Klout, which was announced a little over a year ago. In July, Bing searches began factoring into Klout score.

  • Microsoft Launches ‘Bing Offers Card-Linked’ Deals

    Earlier this year, Bing announced Bing Offers, its latest foray into the local deals space. The product launched across the United States. Today, the company has announced an expansion of that with “Bing Offers Card-Linked”.

    This is a program they’re launching in Seattle only for the time being, but more cities will follow soon.

    “We found that there is some frustration with having to make major commitments to create coupon deals along with additional investment in infrastructure and training to manage redemptions. Merchants also wished they had more direct control on managing promotions with better insights into consumer engagement,” says Microsoft’s Erik Jorgensen.

    They created Bing Offers Card-Linked to help “minimize this frustration,” partnering with First Data, Visa and MasterCard.

    Basically what it does is gives merchants the ability to provide offers to consumers via their credit cards or other payment cards, so the customer doesn’t have to use a coupon, promotion code or voucher.

    Bing Offers Card-Linked

    Benefits for advertisers, as described by Microsoft, include broad reach (ads across Outlook.com, windows Phone 8, Skype and Bing Apps), a CPA model, better engagement, controlled discounts and “frictionless” redemption.

    So far businesses taking advantage of Bing Offers Card-Linked include: Pizza Hut, Mooyah Burgers, Buca Di Beppo, as well as some other SMBs in the spas, automotive, espresso shop, restaurant and retail store verticals.

    Microsoft expects to update the list of available cities later this year.

  • Bing: We Don’t Track The ‘Bing It On’ Results Because Of Privacy, Have No Idea If People Are More Likely To Select Bing

    Bing has no idea if people are more likely to select Bing results when using its Bing It On challenge, and has admitted as much in a blog post defending its campaign.

    Despite being over a year old, the Bing It On challenge has been in the news this week, due to a study from Freakonomics’ Ian Ayres and a a group of Yale law students.

    When it launched the campaign last year, Bing said that people prefer its search engine 2:1 over Google. Earlier this year, they updated the wording to say that people simply prefer Bing to Google for “the web’s top searches”. The Bing It On site currently says, “Wherever we go, people prefer Bing over Google for the web’s top searches.”

    And they are indeed still going around offering the challenge. They were recently spotted presenting it at a Seattle Seahawks game.

    Ayres wrote this week, “When I looked into the claim a bit more, I was slightly annoyed to learn that the ‘nearly 2:1′ claim is based on a study of just 1,000 participants. To be sure, I’ve often published studies with similarly small data sets, but it’s a little cheeky for Microsoft to base what might be a multi-million dollar advertising campaign on what I’m guessing is a low-six-figure study. To make matters worse, Microsoft has refused to release the results of its comparison website, BingItOn.com.”

    He said, “So together with four Yale Law students, I set up a similar-sized experiment using Microsoft’s own BingItOn.com site to see which search engine users prefer. We found that, to the contrary of Microsoft’s claim, 53 percent of subjects preferred Google and 41 percent Bing (6 percent of results were ‘ties’). This is not even close to the advertised claim that people prefer Bing “nearly two-to-one.” It is misleading to have advertisements that say people prefer Bing 2:1 and also say join the millions of people who’ve taken the Bing-It-On challenge, if, as in our study, the millions of people haven’t preferred Bing at a nearly a 2:1 rate. Microsoft might have realized this and has more recently altered its advertising to back off their original claim to just say that people ‘prefer’ Bing.”

    Bing’s Matt Wallaert defended the challenge in a blog post, criticizing Ayres’ claims and study. You can read the entire post to see all of his jabs, but here’s what he said about Bing not tracking the results of Bing It On:

    Ayres is bothered that we don’t release the data from the Bing It On site on how many times people choose Bing over Google. The answer here is pretty simple: we don’t release it because we don’t track it. Microsoft takes a pretty strong stance on privacy and unlike in an experiment, where people give informed consent to having their results tracked and used, people who come to BingItOn.com are not agreeing to participate in research; they’re coming for a fun challenge. It isn’t conducted in a controlled environment, people are free to try and game it one way or another, and it has Bing branding all over it.

    So we simply don’t track their results, because the tracking itself would be incredibly unethical. And we aren’t basing the claim on the results of a wildly uncontrolled website, because that would also be incredibly unethical (and entirely unscientific).

    Ayres’ final issue is the fact that the Bing It On site suggests queries you can use to take the challenge. He contends that these queries inappropriately bias visitors towards queries that are likely to result in Bing favorability.

    First, I think it is important to note: I have no idea if he is right. Because as noted in the previous answer, we don’t track the results from the Bing It On challenge. So I have no idea if people are more likely to select Bing when they use the suggested queries or not. Emphasis added.

    He goes on to explain some differences between Bing’s controlled studies and the Bing It On site.

    More from the Bing It On saga here.

    Image: BingItOn.com

  • Yale Law Students, Freakonomics Slam Microsoft’s ‘Bing It On’ Campaign

    Bing is really clinging on to this “Bing It On” thing. The campaign began over a year ago, and is still going strong with Microsoft setting up shop at at NFL games to get people to try the “blind taste test” for search results. Bing’s claim was originally that people prefer Bing 2:1 over Google.

    The Bing it On Challenge is drawing some very public criticism this week with Freakonomics giving it a challenge of its own.

    Ian Ayres writes, “When I looked into the claim a bit more, I was slightly annoyed to learn that the ‘nearly 2:1’ claim is based on a study of just 1,000 participants. To be sure, I’ve often published studies with similarly small data sets, but it’s a little cheeky for Microsoft to base what might be a multi-million dollar advertising campaign on what I’m guessing is a low-six-figure study. To make matters worse, Microsoft has refused to release the results of its comparison website, BingItOn.com.”

    “So together with four Yale Law students, I set up a similar-sized experiment using Microsoft’s own BingItOn.com site to see which search engine users prefer,” he writes. “We found that, to the contrary of Microsoft’s claim, 53 percent of subjects preferred Google and 41 percent Bing (6 percent of results were ‘ties’). This is not even close to the advertised claim that people prefer Bing “nearly two-to-one.” It is misleading to have advertisements that say people prefer Bing 2:1 and also say join the millions of people who’ve taken the Bing-It-On challenge, if, as in our study, the millions of people haven’t preferred Bing at a nearly a 2:1 rate. Microsoft might have realized this and has more recently altered its advertising to back off their original claim to just say that people ‘prefer’ Bing.”

    You can read the full study here.

    Google’s Matt Cutts posted about the findings on Google+:


    The jury’s still out on the Million Short It On challenge.

    In other Bing news, they did just release new Pinterest integration for image search and some new Skype-integrated call extensions for ads.

    Image: BingItOn.com

  • Bing Ads Finally Get Those Skype-Integrated Call Extensions

    Earlier this year, we reported that Bing was readying Skype-integrated click-to-call mobile ads, and now it has finally announced them.

    On the Bing Ads blog, Microsoft’s Ambrish Verma introduced Bing’s new Call Extensions, which work across all devices, and utilize Skype. This is something that “no one else can provide,” as Verma notes.

    This is one way where Microsoft’s acquisition of Skype can have a direct impact on revenue.

    “Advertisers can connect with customers through phone calls directly from their ads, regardless of device,” explains Verma. “With Call Extensions for Bing Ads, businesses can now provide a phone number alongside search ads on PCs, tablets and smartphones. Your potential customers can then can call your business by clicking on the phone number that appears on the ads. These are opportunities exclusive to Bing Ads. In each of these scenarios, advertisers will be charged on a cost-per-click basis.”

    Naturally, thanks to the Microsoft Yahoo search advertising deal, the extensions will be seen on Yahoo in addition to Bing.

    Microsoft is also providing advertisers with a set of analytics reports to help monitor the effectiveness of the ads. They will include impressions, calls and spend data, and advertisers will get detailed reports for individual calls received from the extensions.

    They’ve also improved the reporting for the recently launched location extensions.

    Image: Bing

  • Bing Image Search Gets Pinterest Boards

    Bing Image Search Gets Pinterest Boards

    Bing announced today that it has added new Pinterest integration to its Image Search. When users search for an image on Bing, they may see related boards from Pinterest on the right-hand side of the search results page.

    “Every day Bing receives millions of searches from across the Web, and nearly 10 percent of those searches are for images,” a spokesperson for Bing tells WebProNews. “With hundreds of thousands of images to choose from, finding the perfect image can be challenging. That’s why starting today, Bing will bring together curated collections of images from across the Web in new Image collections on Bing image search.”

    Bing Pinterest integration

    Bing on Pinterest

    Bing says this is “only the beginning” of its exploration of ways to showcase social communities within Bing Image Search.

    Earlier this year, Bing added Pinterest pinning functionality to Image Search, enabling users to pin the images they find on Bing to their boards back on Pinterest.

    Pinterest itself recently added more info to article pins, potentially helping drive more web traffic to articles and blog posts. Perhaps some of this Bing image traffic will flow that way as well.

    Images: Bing

  • Here’s What Bing’s Doing On iOS Now

    Here’s What Bing’s Doing On iOS Now

    Bing announced the launch of some new features for the iPhone and iPod Touch today, building on recent updates to its Windows Phone, Android and iOS experiences.

    There are four new tiles for the homepage, which will show trending news, images from Bing trends, maps (for local businesses) and weather.

    Bing on iOS

    There’s also a new share button with an updated design, which allows users to share images via Facebook and Twitter, as well as save a screenshot of the full search results page, homepage image or image from Bing Image Search.

    Bing ioS share

    A new menu lets users browse saved images, screenshots and bookmarks and sign in with a Microsoft account to sync them to Skydrive or the iPad app.

    “Click ‘More Microsoft apps’ to explore additional options in the iOS store including Office Mobile, Skydrive, OneNote and more,” Bing says.

    Bing ioS menu

    iOS Bing

    And don’t forget that Bing is now integrated into Siri. Apple revealed the addition of Bing results (and Wikipedia results) with iOS 7 earlier this year. Apple’s operating system update was just released this week, and is now available (if you can actually download it).

  • Yahoo: Maybe Yahoo Bing Network Isn’t Doing Too Bad After All

    Earlier this year things weren’t looking incredibly great for the Yahoo Microsoft search deal. Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer made comments at the Goldman Sachs Technology and Internet Conference, expressing disappointment with the results.

    If a blog post from Yahoo today regarding the Yahoo Bing Network are any indication, however, things are looking more promising.

    The post shares some stats from Yahoo Bing Preferred Partner Program member Marin Software, which manages $5 billion a year in digital ad spend for global advertisers. Marin analyzed its clients search ad performance from Q2 2012 to Q2 2013.

    They found that impression volume and click volume each grew 33%. Click-through rates remained consistent, and cost per click increased by $0.03.

    “Several verticals showed significantly better performance and efficiency year over year, including retail, finance, and technology,” Yahoo says in the post. “The automotive vertical showed the most dramatic growth, according to Marin.”

    For the vertical, impression volume grew 13%, click volume grew 77%, click-through rate grew 56%, and cost per click decreased by $0.10.

    “We’re excited to see that advertisers using Marin Software saw significant improvements in both volume and performance on the Yahoo Bing Network,” says Gagan Kanwar, Marin’s Director of Partnerships & Research, as quoted in the post. “Yahoo and Microsoft are doing a terrific job adding volume and gaining user adoption, while maintaining or improving advertiser KPIs.”

    Microsoft said in July that the Yahoo Bing Network had 159 million unique searchers, and that 51 million of them don’t use Google.

    Image: Bing

  • Bing News Gets New Look, Trending Topics From Facebook, Twitter

    Microsoft continues its Bing redesign spree with a new look for Bing News. Here’s the before and after.

    Before

    Bing News before

    After

    Bing News After

    The design adapts to fit your browser width, so it looks good regardless of what device you’re using.

    It also now surfaces trending topics from Facebook, Twitter and Bing itself. The BIng News team writes in a blog post:

    Cut through the clutter from across the Web with Bing’s real-time view of the most relevant breaking trends and social conversations, available all in one place. At the top of the Bing News page, you can easily browse the latest headlines with the news carousel showcasing the latest trending topics in categories including US, world, local, entertainment, sports, politics, and more. If you search for a celebrity or politician who is making headlines, the recent news topics about that person will also be showcased in the carousel. On the right side of the page, you will see what news is trending on Facebook and Twitter based on popular “likes” and “tweets.”

    Bing’s “Satori” technology (basically Bing’s version of Knowledge Graph) also surfaces people who are related to trending news in a ‘Trending Now” section.

    Bing has also launched a new look for Video Search, and recently improved its product search offering.