Google, Not Yahoo, Now Top Destination

Discussion in 'Google' started by suresh2220, May 17, 2008.

  1. #1
    As Google trounced Yahoo in various fields, fans of the second company could always point out that its sites received more U.S. traffic overall. New comScore stats show that this is no longer true.

    In April, 140.6 million Americans visited Yahoo's properties, and 141.1 million stopped by Google's, according to the research company. Microsoft, if it matters, saw closer to 121 million
    visitors.

    But even as it sits in third place, Microsoft's probably having
    a laugh over all this; comScore's news puts Yahoo in a
    significantly weaker position as Carl Icahn does his thing.
    Since Google achieved a higher year-over-year growth rate - 18
    percent versus seven - it doesn't look like Yahoo is liable to
    take back the top spot on its own.

    For Yahoo's supporters, here's the one encouraging point: Nathania Johnson reports, "Yahoo does still lead in page views, meaning either people are returning or are more engaged in Yahoo content.
    Yahoo had 33.6 billion page views while Google saw 28.7 billion
    page views."

    Oh, and Yahoo should still have the lead in photo-sharing with
    Flickr, whereas Google is shutting down its Hello product.

    Whatever happens in Google's peripheral industry dabbling, the search giant lives up to its core reputation by grabbing 67.9 percent of US searches in April, a 4 percent increase year-over-year, according to Hitwise.

    The usual rivals are present in the top four with a noticeable decline for third-place breath-holder MSN. Microsoft's confusingly branded search engine dropped from 6.65 percent in March to 6.26
    percent in April, down from 7.77 percent a year ago, and down significantly from search share once hovering around 12 percent.

    Yahoo has shown little change over time, dropping from 20.29 percent in March to 20.28 percent in April. Ask.com showed an increase in usage, gaining from 4.09 percent to 4.17 percent. The
    remaining 45 search engines Hitwise measured accounted for only 1.4 percent combined.


    ---------------------------
    with regards,
    A Suresh Kumar
    http://suresh-mobileweb.blogspot.com
     
    suresh2220, May 17, 2008 IP
  2. The Stealthy One

    The Stealthy One Well-Known Member Affiliate Manager

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    #2
    This has surprised me. Does anyone think Yahoo will take back the lead?
     
    The Stealthy One, May 17, 2008 IP
  3. zexy

    zexy Guest

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    #3
    Are those 140 millions using Yahoo.com ? Or just sites like Flickr, Delicious, etc.?
    Because I wonder why Yahoo.com brings no traffic (well... almost none, especially in comparison to Google)
     
    zexy, May 17, 2008 IP
  4. umbrus

    umbrus Peon

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    #4
    The future will be very interesting...

    LEts see if this merger ends up taking place between Microsoft and Yahoo...Do you think that will change anything?
     
    umbrus, May 17, 2008 IP
  5. metros

    metros Notable Member

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    #5
    Hi,
    We, the webmasters might get good SERPS but that will take time, and probably won't more then 20-30% of google part.
     
    metros, May 17, 2008 IP