Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer suggested during a June 18 speech in Chicago that the company should have started a push into the search-engine market earlier. With its recent high-profile rollout of Bing, Microsoft is attempting to wrest some market share away from Google and Yahoo, which have aggressively built their businesses on search.Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer,
speaking at the Executives Club of Chicago on June 18, suggested that his
company may have been a little late to the game with regard to search; publicly,
however, he seemed confident that Microsoft's new search engine, Bing, could
make a solid effort against arch-rivals Google and Yahoo in the search-engine
space.
"I would say start sooner on search," Ballmer told the
audience, explaining the one thing he would choose to do over.
"We had no business model in mind," he added with regard to
the search market. "So we were slow to move and slower to invest in it. We
should have started earlier."
With the release of Bing, which provides traditional search
results in addition to the ability for users to drill down into specific subject
categories such as shopping, Ballmer feels that Microsoft can gain market share
on Google.
"Weve got our mojo going now," Ballmer said. "Were the
little engine that could."
Bing performed strongly in the few weeks after its
June 1 rollout;
research firm comScore reported that the sites daily penetration among
U.S. searchers
increasing to 16.7 percent by June 12. During that period, Microsofts share of
search results pages in the
United States increased
to 12.1 percent.
Microsoft has been pouring the equivalent of a small
countrys GDP into its Bing promotional
effort, with an advertising budget of between $80 million and $100 million,
according to The New York Times. In addition to traditional advertising,
Microsoft has also been trying more unconventional avenues, such as paid content
through online-video site Hulu.com.
While an early report by StatCounter soon after Bings
rollout, suggesting that the site had already overtaken Yahoo by more than six points
in U.S. market
share, was disputed by Nielsen and other firms, more definitive data suggested
that Microsofts share of the pre-Bing search market had been
dropping.
According to a June 16 report by Nielsen, the number of people conducting online searches
via Microsofts sites had dropped by 14.6 percent between May 2008 and May
2009. By contrast,
year-over-year growth for Yahoo and Google had reached 22.3 and 28.2
percent.