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Tag: Bing

  • Bing Partners With FOX News On ‘Non-Partisan’ Politics Site

    Bing announced today that it has partnered with FOX News Channel and Foxnews.com to launch Bing Pulse, enabling users to give real-time feedback to President Obama’s State Of The Union address.

    This is part of a new political destination site from Bing at Bing.com/Politics, playing off Bing’s Elections offering. The company describes it as “a non-partisan online destination designed to meet this growing need for up-to-the-minute political information and second-screen experiences.”

    At this destination, users will be able to watch the speech live with commentary from FOX News pundits and “other political experts” via Twitter. They’ll also be able to participate in the Bing Pulse survey, filter news from left, center and right-leaning national and local news sources, according to Bing. Users will also be able to access original videos of Jimmy Carter and Newt Gingrich talking about the State of the Union address.

    “The Bing Pulse will allow people to join the conversation by ‘voting’ every five seconds on their reactions to the President’s speech,” Mark Penn, Corporate Vice President, Microsoft. “Real time results of the Bing Pulse will be shown at Bing.com/Politics and on FOX News Channel. We think this will be the largest live online poll in history.”

    Bing.com/Politics is also unveiling its “social sentiment tracker” called Bing Beat. This will analyze social sentiment on Twitter associated with the address – topics like immigration, gun control and the fiscal cliff.

    The new Bing.com/Politics will launch on Saturday.

  • Bing Does Another, Slightly Different Blind Search Test

    As you may have read, Microsoft is attacking Google again. This time, they’ve extended the “Scroogled” campaign to call out Google over ad targeting in Gmail, based on a feature that Google has openly implemented since Gmail came out.

    But that’s not all, Bing is also pushing the “Bing It On” campaign again as well, with some updated testing. Microsoft commissioned another study by Answers Research using 1,000 people 18 and older from across the United States, choosing them from a random survey panel. These people were required to have used a major search engine in the past month, and according to Microsoft, had no idea that Bing and Google were specifically being tested, nor were they told the study had been commissioned by Microsoft.

    Like on the Bing It On site, people were shown results without ads, Bing’s social features or Google’s Knowledge graph. Just raw organic search results. Instead of being able to search for whatever they wanted, they had to choose from a list of five queries at a time. The list could be refreshed if they didn’t like any of the options.

    “We wanted queries that matched what people typically searched for, so we finally settled on using terms from Google’s Zeitgeist 2012, because while we could have used our own Top Searches of 2012, we figured the right thing to do was to go with our competitor’s terms,” explains Bing behavioral scientist Matt Wallaert in a blog post. “After all, you’d think Google would be better at their own top queries, right?”

    “Wrong,” he adds. “In a blind test, people preferred Bing to Google for the web’s top searches. And that is just based on pure web results, so no ads, no Bing Snapshot and Social Search, no Google Knowledge Graph. Even taking away some of our most innovative features and with the handicap of using Google’s top search queries, Bing still comes out on top, with 52% of people preferring Bing’s results over Google’s, 36% preferring Google’s, and 12% choosing Bing and Google equally (for those that favor discarding ties, that’s 60% Bing, 40% Google when people had a clear preference). For the especially geeky, all those numbers are +/- 3% at a 95% confidence level.”

    As is the case with Bing’s previous test, and with the concept of the Bing It On site, the test is still hardly representative of the true search experience, given the absence of the key features that were left out (Bing’s social features and Google’s Knowledge Graph). These features have both become important parts of each search engine’s respective user experience. The trend in search is moving away from the “ten blue links”.

  • Microsoft Uses “Scroogled” Ads To Attack Decade-Old Gmail Feature

    Microsoft is at it again with a new “Scroogled” campaign (you know, the ads where Microsoft attacks Google for things). The whole thing is a promotion for Microsoft’s Outlook.com.

    The basic premise is that Google serves you ads in Gmail based on the content of your messages. Google has been doing this since Gmail launched in 2004. It’s been well known. They are doing nothing new or different than what they’ve done all this time. It’s completely algorithmic, and they have no humans reading emails and deciding what ads to serve. Google serves ads. It’s how they make money to keep providing users with products like Gmail.

    Microsoft, on the “Scroogled” site, says, “Think Google respects your privacy? Think again. Google goes through every Gmail that’s sent or received, looking for keywords so they can target Gmail users with paid ads. And there’s no way to opt out of this invasion of your privacy.”

    Of course, there is the option of not using Gmail, which is what Microsoft wants you to do, obviously. What Microsoft doesn’t tell you in the Scroogled campaign (which search industry vet Danny Sullivan does), is that Microsoft does go through your messages (also algorithmically) to help filter out spam and phishing attacks (which Google also does). The difference is that Google is also able to serve targeted ads as well – something that Microsoft has evidently chosen not to do.

    Sullivan spoke with Microsoft senior director of Online Services, Stefan Weitz, who says that for security, the practice makes sense, and it’s the scanning for contextual targeting of ads that Microsoft objects to (again, this is after nearly a decade that they’re suddenly objecting). This is essentially the basis for MIcrosoft’s new ads.

    Check out the natural dialogue in this one:

    The next one asks, “Who wants a free pet exam coupon when the family cat has been put down?”

    The cat thing is a fair point. It is always possible that ad targeting will go wrong, but that really just says to me that Google could get better at targeting.

    An opt out option is certainly not a terrible idea for consumers, but it would be interesting to know how big a concern the privacy thing this really is to consumers to begin with. Gmail has become very popular over the last decade, and this ad targeting thing has always been a well known part of the system. Does every user realize it’s happening. Probably not, but this was a story that was covered in the media back when it was relevant, and it did little to stop Gmail’s popularity from growing. Here are the Microsoft-commissioned polling numbers the company is throwing around about consumer reaction:

    • 88 percent of Americans disapprove of email service providers scanning the content of their personal emails in order to target ads, and 52 percent disapprove strongly.
    • 89 percent of Americans agree that email service providers should not be allowed to scan the content of personal emails in order to target ads.
    • 83 percent of Americans agree that email service providers scanning the content of their personal emails to target ads is an invasion of privacy.
    • 70 percent of Americans didn’t believe or didn’t know that any major email service provider scans the content of personal emails in order to target ads.
    • 88 percent of email users believe that email service providers should allow users to “opt out” if they prefer that the content of their emails not be scanned in order to target ads.

    That second ad also pulls out some old footage of Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt smiling and saying, “There’s what I call the creepy line and the Google policy about a lot of these things is to get right up to the creepy line, but not cross it.”

    Of course, that clip is completely out of context here. It’s from a 2010 interview with The Atlantic (which Google itself has posted to YouTube):

    You can start about 14 minutes in. The line comes at a part where Schimdt and the interviewer are joking about brain implants, which Schmidt says would in fact cross the “creepy line”. Granted, he does follow up with “at least for the moment…until the technology gets better”. I’m eager to see the Scroogled ad about brain implants, for sure, but Schmidt was not talking about the algorithmic ad serving that takes place within Gmail. He does talk about Google Instant and the type of technology that would pretty much become the basis for Google Now (neither of which is being attacked in this Scroogled campaign).

    So what does Google think about the latest attack from Microsoft? Here’s the statement they’ve been sending around:

    “Advertising keeps Google and many of the websites and services Google offers free of charge. We work hard to make sure that ads are safe, unobtrusive and relevant. No humans read your email or Google Account information in order to show you advertisements or related information. An automated algorithm — similar to that used for features like Priority Inbox or spam filtering — determines which ads are shown.”

    If you want a more in depth explanation from Google, here’s an old help center article about Gmail and privacy. Here’s the entirety of the ad-related section:

    All major free webmail services carry advertising, and most of it is irrelevant to the people who see it. Google believes that showing relevant advertising offers more value to users than displaying random pop-ups or untargeted banner ads. In Gmail, users will see text ads and links to related pages that are relevant to the content of their messages. The links to related pages are similar to Google search results, and are culled from Google’s extensive index of web pages. They are selected solely for their helpfulness and are not paid advertisements.

    In Gmail, ads appear alongside messages, in the same way that ads appear next to search results on Google. Ads are clearly identified as ‘Sponsored Links.’ They are displayed in a way that doesn’t interrupt users as they read their messages and ads are never inserted into the body text of either incoming or outgoing Gmail messages.

    Ads and links to related pages only appear alongside the message that they are targeted to, and are only shown when the Gmail user, whether sender or recipient, is viewing that particular message. No email content or other personally identifiable information is ever shared with advertisers. In fact, advertisers do not even know how often their ads are shown in Gmail, as this data is aggregated across thousands of sites in the Google Network.

    By offering Gmail users relevant ads and information related to the content of their messages, we aim to offer users a better webmail experience. For example, if you and your friends are planning a vacation, you may want to see news items or travel ads about the destination you’re considering.

    To ensure a quality user experience for all Gmail users, we avoid showing ads reflecting sensitive or inappropriate content by only showing ads that have been classified as “Family-Safe.” Gmail’s filters also block ads from running next to messages about catastrophic events or tragedies, erring on the side of not displaying an ad if the content is questionable.

    Many people have found that the search-related ads on Google.com can be valuable–not merely a necessary evil, but a welcome feature. We believe that users will also find Gmail’s ads and related pages to be helpful, because the information reflects their interests. In fact, we have already received positive feedback from Gmail users about the quality and usefulness of our ads and related pages.

    The part about the scanning of email content is particularly relevant here as well:

    All email services scan your email. They do this routinely to provide such popular features as spam filtering, virus detection, search, spellchecking, forwarding, auto-responding, flagging urgent messages, converting incoming email into mobile phone text messages, automatic saving and sorting into folders, converting text URLs to clickable links, and reading messages to the blind. These features are widely accepted, trusted, and used by hundreds of millions of people every day.

    Google scans the text of Gmail messages in order to filter spam and detect viruses, just as all major webmail services do. Google also uses this scanning technology to deliver targeted text ads and other related information. This is completely automated and involves no humans.

    When a user opens an email message, computers scan the text and then instantaneously display relevant information that is matched to the text of the message. Once the message is closed, ads are no longer displayed. It is important to note that the ads generated by this matching process are dynamically generated each time a message is opened by the user–in other words, Google does not attach particular ads to individual messages or to users’ accounts.

    We recognise that seeing ads based on the content of an email message can be unsettling at first. Our experience has been that this feeling recedes as users become more familiar with Gmail. However, some people, many of whom have not used Gmail, have reacted by condemning all automatic scanning of email content, on the grounds that it amounts to a violation of privacy. We think this criticism is misplaced. All major email services, including Hotmail and Yahoo! Mail, automatically scan email content for the benefit of users. When email messages are fully protected from unwanted disclosure, the automatic scanning of email does not amount to a violation of privacy.

    On the other hand, delivering information gathered through email scanning to a third party would be a violation of privacy. Google does not do this. Neither email content nor any personal information is ever shared with other parties as a result of our ad-targeting process.

    Emphasis in both sections is Google’s.

    “Emails are personal — and people feel that reading through their emails to sell ads is out of bounds,” says Weitz. “We honor the privacy of our Outlook.com users, and we are concerned that Google violates that privacy every time an Outlook.com user exchanges messages with someone on Gmail. This campaign is as much about protecting Outlook.com users from Gmail as it is about making sure Gmail users know what Google’s doing.”

    Around the holidays, Microsoft started its Scroogled campaign against Google Shopping. Last week, we learned that Microsoft will be launching its own product listing ads (the ad format on which Google Shopping is based) later this year. Microsoft’s David Pann tells us, however, that the Bing Shopping experience will keep free listings alongside the paid ones.

    We should have more on this latest Scroogled campaign from Weitz in the near future.

  • Bing Launches Video Results In Windows 8 App

    Bing announced today that it has released an update to its Windows 8 app that includes touch-friendly video results, in addition to web and image results. The update is available in 12 countries.

    The video results, of course, feature infinite scroll.

    Infinite Scroll

    “Scrolling through one giant page of video results is a nice start, but we don’t stop there,” says Bing senior product manager Sara Borthwick. “Who wants to wait for a video to load before finding out if it’s worth watching? We don’t that’s why this update includes our exclusive Smart Motion Thumbnails that let you watch a preview of results without having to wait for the video to load. Simply tap a video result thumbnail with a play icon in the lower right hand corner, or mouse over the thumbnail image, to start the video preview. Tap again or mouse away to stop the preview video. Click on the text description to the right to go to the full video.”

    “If the search results aren’t exactly what you were looking for, Bing has made finding related searches even easier,” adds Borthwick.k “Just place two fingers on the search results screen and pinch to get related search queries. This feature is called Semantic Zoom and is also available for the web and image results.”

    Frankly, I find it a little odd that this wasn’t included with the app to begin with. Windows 8 is, after all, Microsoft’s creation. Better late than never, I suppose. There was always Bing.com anyway.

  • Bing To Launch Skype-Integrated Click-To-Call Mobile Ads This Year [Exclusive]

    As previously reported, Microsoft has some new ad products for the Yahoo Bing Network on the way this year. Notably, we should be seeing Bing product listing ads (similar to Google’s) before the year’s over.

    Microsoft Search Network GM, David Pann, tells WebProNews that we will also see a new ad format in the form of “Click To Call” (also much like Google’s offering). Bing’s take on the ad format will be the result of a partnership with Skype (which, of course, Microsoft acquired in 2011).

    The ad format will be available on mobile, tablets and PCs, and Skype’s different types of calls “could be on the roadmap” he says.

    Skype already has a click to call offering (pictured), but it doesn’t actually show an ad for the business. “Instead when the Skype plug-in is installed in the users’ browser on a PC, and the business listing is appearing organically on any web page, then it allows the user to click on the listing on the webpage to call that business for free using Skype,” explains Microsoft.

    The click-to-call functionality for Bing Ads will show advertisers’ ads in search ads when the user is searching for info that’s relevant to the business or category. It will also offer call analytics functionality for search advertisers.

    Bing appears to be paying attention to what is working with AdWords and trying to emulate, or improve upon it for the Bing Ads experience. Pann said of Bing’s sitelinks format, that advertisers come over with the mentality of “It performs well over there [Google], so it will here too.” Surely, they’re counting on a similar mentality with click to call and product listing ads (which have been paying off quite nicely for Google).

    Pann says they’e adopted a philosophy of trying to do in 15 minutes for advertisers what AdWords can do in 45 minutes.

    He also said we can expect Bing to launch Bing Ads Express within the first half of the year. It’s currently in beta. This is aimed at smaller advertisers, and will essentially figure everything out for them in the matter of a couple clicks.

    Pann says Microsoft has been launching new mobile capabilities for Bing Ads somewhere in the world every week, and at least once a month in the U.S.

  • Bing About To Get Google-Like Product Listing Ads [Exclusive]

    We spoke with David Pann, GM of Microsoft’s Search Network, and he tells us that we can expect Bing’s version of product listing ads sometime this year. This may raise a few eyebrows, considering Bing’s heavy campaigning against Google’s PLA-based Google Shopping model, but rest assured, Bing’s not about to start a paid-only model for its shopping results.

    Would you test the waters with Bing’s product listing ads? Let us know in the comments.

    Just in time for the holidays, Bing launched a big anti Google Shopping campaign advising people not to get “Scroogled”. This was in response to Google’s transition to a paid inclusion model for shopping results.

    “Merchants must now pay Google to be listed in the shopping results, and how much they pay helps determine how they appear in the rankings, so now every ‘result’ is really just an ad,” a Bing spokesperson told us at the time. “Unfortunately most consumers are unaware of this change because the disclaimers are not easily discoverable.”

    We don’t have much in the way of details about Bing’s coming product listing ads (even their official name), but Pann says it’s not going to result in a pay to play system for Bing Shopping the way Google Shopping is set up. Google Shopping (as of October in the U.S. and since in other countries) is based solely on PLAs, but Bing will retain free listings as well. Pann says there is room for free and paid to co-exist.

    When we talked with Bing’s Stefan Weitz in December, he told us, “The problem with Google’s Shopping results is that they look like search. They act like search. But everything one sees in the ‘search’ experience is bought and paid for.”

    “In stark contrast, we simply don’t take money in exchange for ranking. Period,” he said. “The vast majority of our product listings come either from free feeds given to us by merchants and our crawler. Yes, it’s harder. Yes, it costs us more money to make sure we offer a quality shopping experience. But at least it’s still real search.”

    “One of Danny’s issues is that we accept feeds from third party aggregators like Shopping.com and PriceGrabber,” Weitz continued, referring to a Danny Sullivan article criticizing Bing for engaging in some of the practices it seemed to be calling out Google for. “A merchant may pay to have their products listed in one of those third party sites. We, in turn, get feeds from those sites to make sure we have a complete product offering catalog. And if a customer happens to buy a product from a merchant who has paid one of the third party shopping sites to be listed, we do get a portion of that click revenue. But – and this is important – we DO NOT take into account the fact a merchant paid a third party when we rank our product offers. If we manage to get paid, it’s a happy accident. Unlike Google, it isn’t our business model.”

    Pann expects the product listing ads to come to market sometime this calendar year.

    Bing product listing ads have been spotted in the wild in the past. Last summer, RKG shared some screenshots of what Microsoft was testing at the time.

    Bing PLAs

    It’s unclear at this point if the finished product will look just like these. Pann did say the product would be similar to Google’s PLAs. He also noted that some “alpha testers” have been using them.

    There has pretty much been nothing but positive data coming out about Google’s PLAs lately (positive for Google and for advertisers). In fact, Adobe recently shared some data with us indicating that Google PLA spend alone is nearly that of Yahoo Bing Network spend in the U.S.

    Still, Yahoo Bing Network continues to take away market share from Google piece by piece. Microsoft points to independent data from firms like RKG showing that Microsoft’s Bing Ads and the Yahoo Bing Network have seen positive momentum already this year, and that Bing Ads have gained paid search spend share from Google for the fourth quarter in a row.

    Pann attributes the Bing Ads momentum to a variety of factors. One is new ad formats like its version of sitelinks, which Pann says have seen rapid adoption. According to Pann, advertisers come over with the mentality of “It performs well over there [Google], so it will here too.”

    Another factor, Pann says, has been Microsoft’s efforts in reducing friction for advertisers and making the system easier to use. He says Microsoft has adopted the philosophy of “what takes 45 minutes in AdWords should take 15 minutes with Bing Ads”. He also says the Google Import Feature has been a key factor, in its availability for the desktop tool, the API, and the user interface. Adoption of the feature, he says, has taken off.

    Similar capabilities will likely be implemented in other tools in the future. He notes that Google’s agreement with the FTC (the part related to ad campaign data portability) is an important step in that regard.

    Microsoft and Pann appear quite pleased with the level of success Bing Ads have seen in recent months, but Pann says, “We’re not finished by any means.”

    The new product listing ads are just one thing Microsoft has up its sleeve for the year. Also on the horizon are Bing Ad Express (aimed at Small Businesses) and Click-to-Call ads with Skype integration. More on those here.

    Are you looking forward to Bing offering product listing ads? Let us know in the comments.

  • Bing Ads Get Inline Editorial Appeals, Updated Keyword Research Tool

    Microsoft announced a couple of updates to Bing Ads, including inline editorial appeals, and an improved keyword research tool.

    The former provides two new views in the Bing Ads Editor where advertisers can appeal all of the rejected items in one click, and view appealed items by category and appeal by category if they have a large number of ads. This can be accessed by clicking “View Editorial Errors” or by clicking “View,” and then “Editorial Disapprovals.”

    “Our aim is to reduce the amount of time you spend viewing and appealing rejected ads, and reduce the steps in the overall editorial workflow while ensuring you are fully informed,” says Microsoft’s Aurea Astro.

    Bing Ads Appeals

    The editorial appeals feature is available in all markets. The new keyword research tool is available in US, CA, FR, UK, DE, IE, SG, IN, AT, and CH. It will let advertisers find keyword suggestions for up to ten seed keywords or website URL (up to sixty suggestions per keyword) and with bid recommendations.

    New filters like Devices, Brand Names and Max # Suggestions can be applied.

  • Bing Wants You To Let It Know What Pages “Best Represent You” (And Your Friends)

    Bing recently launched Bing Tags, promising to help you “get noticed,” and “show up better on Bing”. The feature lets Bing users tag themselves and their friends in pages around the web, and see what pages their Facebook friends have been tagged in.

    Now, Bing is making tags more visible by letting users select pages they want to tag and having the pages show up in search results.

    “Whether it’s your Twitter profile, blog, or that art portfolio you’re proud of – Bing Tags lets you highlight the pages that best represent you,” says Bing Social program manager Diana Hsu. “You can also help your friends by tagging relevant pages about them. Was your friend quoted in the local paper, or published in an online journal? Or maybe they have a fantastic photo blog to show off? Just tag your friends to show them some love, and once they’ve approved the tags, the pages will appear on Bing.”

    Bing Tags Feature

    “Remember – you have full control over what is shown to the public on Bing,” adds Hsu. “If a friend tags you to a page, we will not surface it outside your network until you confirm the link is the one you want showing up in search results”

    Tags are only visible to friends until they’re approved by the user and made public.

  • Here’s A “Deep Review” Of Bing Webmaster Tools

    Bing has released a webinar video featuring a “deep review” of Bing Webmaster Tools, so if you haven’t gotten familiar with it, this is probably a good place to start. It’s an hour long, and chock-full of info.

    If that wasn’t enough, you can check out this half hour discussion about Bing Webmaster Tools from SEOmoz last year (it features Bing’s Duane Forrester).

    Bing has a few more webinars coming up later this month and next month. Take a look at the schedule here.

  • Bing Adds Five Times More Facebook Content To Your Searches

    Bing has launched some additions to its sidebar today, adding more content from Facebook to the already social-heavy Bing experience launched last year.

    “Beginning today, each person will see an average of five times more Facebook content from their friends in the sidebar,” a spokesperson for Bing tells WebProNews. “This includes the addition of status updates, shared links, and comments from your friends, so it’s easier to see who and what they’ve shared related to your search.”

    ” With the addition of status updates, shared links and comments to the sidebar, it’s now easier to see who knows and what they’ve shared related to your search. So when your friends aren’t around, Bing is the perfect stand-in,” says Bing Corporate Vice President Derrick Connell in a blog post.

    “Bing also puts you in control of your search experience,” says Connell. “We honor all of your existing Facebook privacy settings, nothing is shared automatically, you only see what your friends give you permission to see (though their Facebook settings) so you only share what you want to share.”

    Bing launched a redesign of the social sidebar last month, making it so users no longer have to hover over friends and experts to see additional content. Instead, Bing now just shows the content, marked as social results.

    Of course Bing is also involved with the new Facebook Graph Search, in that it still provides the web search results.

  • Adobe: Google PLA Spend Nearly The Size Of Yahoo-Bing Spend (US)

    Kenshoo recently released some research about Google’s Product Listing Ads (PLAs), the ads that power Google Shopping. The report indicated that PLAs are more effective than text ads, with higher return on ad spend, clickthrough rates, and conversion rates and lower cost-per-click.

    Today, Adobe released some new findings on the U.S. search advertising industry, with more ubpeat news for PLAs. We spoke with Sid Shah, Director of Business Analytics at Adobe, who walked us through the findings. According to Shah, Google’s PLA model has had a major impact on overall retail.

    He says Google increased its marketshare of retail spend by 0.6% in a year to 86.5%, and that almost all its growth came from PLAs. In Q4, PLAs accounted for 10.7% of overall spend, he says, indicating that Google’s PLA program is only a little smaller than the Yahoo Bing network, which is 13.8% of total retail ad spend, he says.

    Retail Spend in Q4

    Perhaps this has something to do with why Bing has been campaigning so hard against Google’s switch to the current PLA-based Google Shopping model. Shah would not comment on Bing, but tells us he thinks the marketplace is moving toward this kind of model, noting that Amazon also has a PLA program. Any savvy search engine, he says, will try different formats.

    “The growth of PLA spend was gradual,” says Shah. “As Google transitioned its Google Shopping program to the paid model in early October, PLA spend and impression share increased with the onset of the holiday shopping season. By mid December PLA spend accounted for 17% of all advertiser spend on Google. As the holiday season ramped down, PLA spend dropped too. Thus, it remains to be seen at which final level PLA spend stabilizes.”

    PLA as percentage of total Google

    “Comparing PLA vs. standard text ads provides us with some interesting insights,” says Shah. “First, PLAs have a 34% higher Click Through Rate (CTR) than non-PLA ads, which is not surprising given the ads pictorial format (compared to standard Google text ads). Second, the average order value (AOV) for PLA ads is 12% lower than standard ads. Again, this is not surprising given that prices are shown on PLA ads. We surmise PLAs attract more bargain conscious shoppers who pick retailers offering the lowest price for a product of interest. Third, ROI and CPCs on PLA ads are comparable to standard ads too. Thus, the market has seamlessly rationalized the price of PLA ads so that their performance is comparable to the standard ad ROI.”

    PLA vs Text

    One of the main takeaways, Shah says, is that retailers should consider how PLAs played such a significant role during the past retail season, and think about optimizing coming PLA campaigns for from both the bid and feed management perspectives.

    For more of Shah’s findings, take a look at his blog post, which also looks at some interesting trends in mobile and tablets.

  • Bing Starts Funding Matchmaking Startup LikeBright

    Bing announced today that it has added LikeBright to the Bing Fund, its “angel investor with an incubator”. Bing Fund launched in July, and then unveiled its first startups the following month. These were Buddy and Pinion.

    LikeBright is the first startup Bing Fund has added since then. Senior Program Manager Aya Zook says LikeBright “has the potential to fill a void experienced by millions – finding a match online.” That’s saying something, especially considering that Bing was part of Facebook’s Graph Search announcement, which many have suggested could be quite ideal for matchmaking.

    “At the end of day, technology is about helping enrich people’s lives,” says Rahul Sood, General Manager of Bing Fund. “Using social signals we generate online, LikeBright lets your network have a say in who your potential matches could be. Because who better to vouch for you and a match than your friends and family? We’re excited at the opportunity to help LikeBright further this vision.”

    “LikeBright’s mission is to eliminate loneliness using the shared social ties that connect people,” says LikeBright founder and CEO Nick Soman. “Most single people meet their partners through friends, and lots of people like to set their friends up. We give them a simple, social and safe way to do this online. People deserve to find love through the people they trust. Having Bing and Microsoft in our corner will help us make it happen faster.”

    LikeBright does make use of Facebook to let users “connect privately”.

    Like Bing, LikeBright is based in the Seattle area.

  • Facebook Graph Search Retains Bing as Important Partner

    Today, at an event at their Menlo Park HQ, Facebook unveiled ‘what they’ve been working on”: Graph Search.

    Graph Search is Facebook’s attempt to improve the site’s search function by giving it a massive makeover. With Graph Search, Facebook says that they want to make it easier to navigate your connections, and make them more useful.

    Basically, Graph Search will appear as a modified search bar at the top of each page. From there, users can enter queries like “Friends who live in Lexington and like Quentin Tarantino” or “Indian restaurants that my friends like.” Each query will result in a brand new page of information that is organized by Facebook’s ranking factors to bring you the best results, from within Facebook.

    It’s launching in beta (with a slow rollout), and focuses on four areas of information: People, Photos, Places, and Interests.

    But it’s clearly not web search. It’s better Facebook search. Sure, Facebook hopes that you choose to search for things within Facebook that you may have previously searched for on Google, to name one engine. But Facebook’s Graph Search isn’t going to be able to provide you with everything you need to know.

    “Graph Search and web search are very different. Web search is designed to take a set of keywords (for example: “hip hop”) and provide the best possible results that match those keywords. With Graph Search you combine phrases (for example: “my friends in New York who like Jay-Z”) to get that set of people, places, photos or other content that’s been shared on Facebook. We believe they have very different uses,” says Facebook.

    They also made it very clear that they “are not indexing the web.”

    For all queries unanswerable by the Graph Search, Facebook is tapping Bing to help. Bing, who is already Facebook’s web search partner will have a key role in the Graph Search.

    “As part of this product, our two engineering teams worked together to advance a unified search experience. That means that when people want to search beyond Facebook, they see web search results from Bing with social context and additional information such as Facebook pages,” says Bing Search VP Derrick Connell.

    So if you search for something inside Graph Search that Facebook has yet to include – weather, for instance – you’ll be given the option to open up a web search powered by Bing.

    The new Bing search within Graph Search will sport a two-column layout, with Bing web results on the left and social information from Facebook on the right, which will include related content from Pages and apps. That differs from the current Bing search within Facebook, which doesn’t feature any additional Facebook content inside.

    Bing Facebook Graph Search

    “We don’t think a lot of people will come to Facebook to do web searches, but if we can’t find what you’re looking for, it’s good to have this,” said Mark Zuckerberg during today’s press event.

    As Facebook improves Graph Search (they are adamant about its status as a beta product that will only get better), users may lose the need to perform web searches. At least that’s Facebook’s hope. But for now and for the foreseeable future, Facebook and Bing are partners once again in the former’s latest venture, which they all seem pretty excited about.

  • Bing Tests Weird Competitor Links Under Google Search Result

    Well, this is interesting. Bing ran a test, placing links to Facebook, Craigslist and eBay underneath its result for google.com when the user searched “google”.

    Matt McGee at Search Engine Land noticed what he thought was a bug, until he received confirmation from Bing that it was actually a test (which has since ended, apparently).

    Regularly, if you search “google” on Bing, the top result will look something like this:

    Bing's Google Deeplinks

    You’ll get Deep Links (Bing’s version of what Google calls Sitelinks) for Gmail, Images, Maps, News, Videos, Translate, Documents, and Finance. In other words, you get links to various Google services, which makes sense. You also get an actual Google search box.

    In the experiment, however, users would see half of the Google deep links, and the other half would be for things like “Go to Facebook, Go to YouTube, Go to Craigslist, and Go to eBay. Well, YouTube is still a Google service, but why in the world would someone searching for “google” want any of these?

    McGee has a screen cap:

    Google results on Bing

    Essentially, Bing was sending users to Google competitors. You may not always consider sites like Facebook Craigslist or eBay competitors to Google, but Google has a social media service, and it has a shopping service. At some level, Google competes with all of these sites.

    I’m surprised they didn’t just put a “Go to Bing.com” link there, or even a “Go to Yahoo.com” link. At least you can still access Bing results from Facebook.

    McGee posted a Q&A with Bing about the test. He asked how Bing would respond if a search for “bing” on Google included Sitelinks to Twitter, Amazon or Kayak. Bing’s response was, “We appreciate all customer-focused innovation.”

    Something tells me Bing would throw a fit if Google did that. Perhaps it would even get another anti-Google campaign from the company. It’s been over a month since they started one.

  • Chandler Style Is Your Inevitable Friends/Gangnam Style Mashup of the Day

    You thought Gangnam Style was dead, didn’t you? Well, it kind of is – at least according to PSY. But fear not, another dance craze is ready to rise up and take its place.

    OPPA CHANDLER STYLE.

    Comedy Central UK created this amazing little mashup for a New Year’s Eve Friends promo which features two incredibly popular internet memes. First, Gangnam Style (of course). Second, the Chandler dances on things meme, which as the title suggests, consists of Chandler Bing doing his little dance on various objects. Pure internet gold.

    This is probably the best use of the Chandler dancing meme since someone decided that Chandler Bing needed to dance on the Bing logo. Which he does.

    (image)

    [via The Daily What]

  • When Bing Gets Paid For Shopping Results, It’s A “Happy Accident”

    Last month, Bing launched an attack campaign against Google Shopping, called “Don’t Get Scroogled“. Microsoft’s search engine has consistently been calling out Google’s recent transition form an anyone-can-get-in-for-free approach to a paid inclusion approach for Shopping results, as well as how Google has chosen to disclose this to consumers.

    Do you prefer Bing’s business practices to Google’s when it comes to shopping results? Let us know in the comments.

    We had a chance to have a conversation about this with Stefan Weitz, Senior Director of Search at Microsoft, who tells us the Scroogled campaign has been working.

    “Millions of people have visited scroogled.com and viewed the videos that outline how Google is no longer offering honest shopping search,” Weitz tells WebProNews. “Tens of millions of people have seen our television ads, print ads and online efforts. How is it all working? I can tell you that the campaign is accomplishing what we want – helping people more informed about what they are seeing in search and how what Google once called a ‘particularly insidious’ practice is now status quo for their shopping experience.”

    Here are the Scroogled videos:

    “I can also tell you the number of inbound requests for interviews and more information has exploded as people understand the issue more completely,” says Weitz. “Last, we now even have some merchants who have contacted us to talk about how the new Google Product Listing Ads experience has negatively affected their businesses.”

    But we’ve heard Bing’s side of the story numerous times now, from the campaign itself, and from other articles about it. Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land wrote a piece, concluding that Bing is “guilty of the same problems” it calls out Google for.

    We asked Weitz what he’d like readers to know that they haven’t heard before. “I’d tell readers to look at this third party study that outlines what is happening to product selection on Google as a result of their shift to paid ranking,” he says.

    Actually, we did link to that before, but feel free to check it out again.

    “I’d also tell them to look to Google for more honest responses about what they are really doing,” Weitz adds. “Their only response to the campaign was fraught with errors and misstatements whether, intentional or not, misleading readers.”

    “Finally, I’d tell people to look beyond the core issue here and think about the bigger picture,” he says. “They’ve already abandoned one of their core principles that made them a trusted consumer brand and are now trading on that goodwill while surreptitiously changing the rules of their game. What’s next as their margins continue to get squeezed as more usage shifts to lower monetization mobile queries?”

    We asked Weitz to explain why he believes Sullivan’s article is wrong about Bing. He says he’s talked to Sullivan several times about this.

    “While he makes some good points about ensuring all sites do a great job with disclosure, he and I simply disagree on the core issue,” Weitz tells us. “The problem with Google’s Shopping results is that they look like search. They act like search. But everything one sees in the ‘search’ experience is bought and paid for.”

    “In stark contrast, we simply don’t take money in exchange for ranking. Period,” he says. “The vast majority of our product listings come either from free feeds given to us by merchants and our crawler. Yes, it’s harder. Yes, it costs us more money to make sure we offer a quality shopping experience. But at least it’s still real search.”

    “One of Danny’s issues is that we accept feeds from third party aggregators like Shopping.com and PriceGrabber,” Weitz continues. “A merchant may pay to have their products listed in one of those third party sites. We, in turn, get feeds from those sites to make sure we have a complete product offering catalog. And if a customer happens to buy a product from a merchant who has paid one of the third party shopping sites to be listed, we do get a portion of that click revenue. But – and this is important – we DO NOT take into account the fact a merchant paid a third party when we rank our product offers. If we manage to get paid, it’s a happy accident. Unlike Google, it isn’t our business model.”

    On the Bing Shopping “Getting Started” page, which Sullivan displayed in his article, Bing lists one of the benefits of listing through shopping.com as:

    “Higher visibility: Paid offers will be highlighted throughout Bing Shopping, including search result and product pages.”

    Here’s that part highlighted on the page:

    Bing Shopping - Getting Started

    It kind of sounds like if you want higher visibility, you can pay to have offers highlighted throughout Bing Shopping, including search results (and product pages).

    We asked Weitz, “Does this not mean that you get higher visibility in shopping results when you pay?”

    “No,” he says. “It means you MIGHT be listed as our ‘Sponsored Offer’ above our organic product listings or on the right rail of ads. All of which are clearly marked as ads.”

    Perhaps they might want to take another look at the wording. It’s also worth noting that on that page, they’re recommending that method of getting listed (“We recommend this method for the following benefits”). It’s also the first one listed (ahead of submitting a feed to Bing directly).

    Back in the summer, Sullivan wrote a letter to the FTC, calling for an industry-wide transparency review regarding how search engines display paid listings. At the time, we asked Google if they would support such a review. Google said, “Consumers benefit from clear labeling in search results, and we have always clearly disclosed which links are paid advertisements. That said, not all search engines clearly disclose paid results, so we would support a fresh look by the FTC at search labeling and transparency practices.”

    We asked Microsoft/Bing at the time as well. They said, “No comment.” We asked Weitz about this.

    He now says, “Microsoft is mindful of and complies with all applicable laws. We are willing to work with the FTC on relevant matters, including search engine labeling and transparency, and respect the FTC’s role on the issue.”

    Bing is not the only one who doesn’t like Google’s transition to paid inclusion for Google Shopping. There have indeed been plenty of users and businesses complaining about it. We’ve seen it in our own article comments.

    Interestingly, even former Googler Vanessa Fox, who is credited with creating Google’s Webmaster Central, has expressed concern about Google’s shift. In a recent interview, she told WebProNews, “I’m not super happy about the shift to paid placement in product search. I can see the rationale of why they did it, but doesn’t reflect the stated mission all that well.”

    While we had Weitz, he thought we’d see what he had to say about a couple of other recent developments. For one, as you may know, Google has altered its SafeSearch feature in the U.S. to a great deal of outcry. We’ve seen some people say they would start using Bing because of it.

    “I’d say this is what happens when a single player commands a huge share of a market – they can do things consumers don’t want and they can do it with relative impunity,” Weitz says.

    NORAD, which has been tracking Santa at Christmas time with Google for years, made the jump to Microsoft this year (though Google is still tracking Santa on its own).

    Weitz says, “I have watched NORAD tracks Santa for years with my daughter who is now 8 and I can’t tell you the number of times she asked me why Santa was using Google as he flew over the world. I’m glad this year I won’t have to tell her it’s because Santa gets a kickback from Google Shopping.”

    Of course, Google didn’t migrate to the paid inclusion model until this year, so there’s no reason he would have had to tell her that in the past, but point taken.

    Does Bing have a legitimate point with its attack on Google Shopping? Let us know what you think.

  • Google Isn’t Letting Bing Have Santa All To Itself

    NORAD may have went the Bing/Windows route this year with its Santa Tracker, but Google isn’t going to let Microsoft have all of the fun.

    “While we’ve been tracking Santa since 2004 with Google Earth, this year a team of dedicated Google Maps engineers built a new route algorithm to chart Santa’s journey around the world on Christmas Eve,” says Brian McClendon, VP of Google Maps and Google Earth. “On his sleigh, arguably the fastest airborne vehicle in the world, Santa whips from city to city delivering presents to millions of homes. You’ll be able to follow him on Google Maps and Google Earth, and get his stats starting at 2:00 a.m. PST Christmas Eve at google.com/santatracker.”

    Tracking Santa

    Google also has a new Chrome extension and an Android app for Santa tracking.

    “Before Santa takes off on Christmas Eve, you can also use the extension to follow the countdown to his departure, play around with his blimp, elf bus, and write messages on a frosty browser window,” says Google Chrome developer Eric Bidelman.

    And of course, you can follow the updates on Google+, Facebook or Twitter.

    You can go to the Santa’s Village site to watch the countdown.

    Google also lets you send personalized holiday phone calls from Santa to your friends and family with Google Voice. You can learn more about that here.

  • Bing Image Search Gets Faster And Prettier

    Bing Image Search Gets Faster And Prettier

    Bing announced that it is rolling out some changes to Image Search, including speed improvements and a completely redesigned image viewer.

    “We ‘dimmed the lights’ around the photo, adding a darker look that makes it easier on the eyes and lets the results shine in high definition,” says Bing Image Search program manager Jon Noronha. “Simply click on the main image to navigate to the original source web page.”

    Here’s the before and after:

    Bing Image Search

    It also comes with full screen mode, and a larger filmstrip at the bottom of the screen, which you can scroll through with the arrow keys (or by clicking the arrows).

    “The new design doesn’t just look great – it’s also much faster,” says Noronha. “We rebuilt our viewer from the ground up focusing on speed improvements so you can see a picture immediately, without wasting time waiting for the page to load. And when you want to go back to your results, just click the X to close it.”

    You can preview sites that images are from before clicking through, and you can click “more sizes” or “similar images” for more image options.

    I’m sure more than a few former Google Image Search users will be checking all of this out.

  • Bing Updates Social Sidebar On iPad

    Bing has been tweaking its search results interface for the past week or so. First, they added people and places information to the middle column (Snapshot). After that, they launched a redesign of the social sidebar.

    Today, Bing has updated its Safari for iPad (and iPad Mini) browser support with the new social sidebar.

    Social Sidebar on iPad

    “In a glance you can now see what friends, experts and enthusiasts have shared on leading networks including Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and Klout related to what you’re searching for,” says Bing Social principal group program manager Chris Rayner.

    The design will adapt to landscape or portrait. Support will be rolling out over the next few days.

    Microsoft also expanded Bing for Desktop to more versions of Windows and more languages this week.

  • Yahoo Has A New Search Deal With AVG

    Yahoo Has A New Search Deal With AVG

    Antivirus maker AVG announced on Thursday that it has formed a new Search and Distribution relationship with Yahoo. AVG’s Secure Search offering is now powered by Yahoo. This is interesting, considering that Yahoo’s own search is powered by Bing.

    AVG CEO JR Smith said, “AVG is excited to team up with Yahoo! to help provide Internet users with peace of mind when searching the web or accessing their favorite online properties. This relationship represents a shift from the company’s previous strategy of entering into exclusive search agreements in its search and advertising services business. Consumers have many choices when it comes to how they access the Internet, and our objective is simply to keep them secure, each step of the way.”

    Yahoo SVP of Connections Shashi Seth added, “Internet users everywhere want to be able to access online content easily without having to worry about security threats. We’re committed to providing a rich search experience to AVG users and see this relationship as a strategic way for us to enrich and broaden our search footprint moving forward.”

    AVG Secure Search is aimed at protecting people from “dangerous websites and online threats,” and utilizes the company’s LinkScanner technology. Here’s a bit more about the product from AVG’s site:

    AVG Secure Search alerts you before you visit dangerous webpages to make sure your identity, personal information, and computer are protected. In addition, our integrated AVG Do Not Track brings the control over your privacy back to you.

    AVG says it provides Intenet and mobile security to 143 million active users.

    According to the latest numbers from comScore, Yahoo’s share of the core search market in the U.S. is on the decline, dropping 0.1% year-over-year to 12.1%

  • Bing Desktop Expands To More Windows Versions, Languages

    Bing has launched an update to Bing Desktop, expanding support to all versions of Windows, XP and higher, and adding four languages.

    Bing Desktop v1.1 lets you go back through 9 days worth of Bing homepage images and set them as your Windows Desktop background.

    “Bing Desktop also provides a fast and simple route to get search results,” says Bing senior product manager Sara Borthwick. “To start searching, simply click on the Bing taskbar icon, or the Bing tile on your Windows 8 Start screen, and the search bar will automatically appear at the front of the screen. Type in a search term or phrase using the autosuggest keywords or your search history, and the search results will appear in your default browser. You’re off and running in a matter of keystrokes. When not in use, the search box recedes into the background to maximize precious screen space.”

    “Bing Desktop can now help you stay in the know with the highlights of the top news, videos, images and popular now topics within the search bar,” adds Borthwick. “Just click on the content icon, select the content type and scroll through top headlines without opening a browser. For more detail about any of the topics, simply click on the article, image or text link to open a browser with the corresponding Bing results.”

    You can also dock the search box at the top of the screen, and it will slide up out of view until your mouse hovers over it, if you like. You can also drag it around freely.

    Bing Desktop is now available in English, French, German, Chinese and Japanese.