As we all know, a great deal has been said about last week's Microsoft and Yahoo! ten year partnership deal, but who is getting the best deal out of all of this?
I am a loyal and avid fan of Yahoo! and this news are a bit sad to me, but I completely understand the move as the company has been struggling for quite some time now and the these are desperate times!
Carol Bartz and Steven Ballmer's deal is not that surprising, as we all saw this coming since the last days of Jerry Jang. A deal of some sort was inevitable and granted this maybe have been the last chance Yahoo! would get from Microsoft. Even though Microsoft has been trying to re-invent itself with the launching and marketing campaign behind Bing, which has paid of for them, as their market share numbers have been boosted nicely. But, Yahoo's market place is much higher than Bing's, with an over 20% share in the search engine business, what is the benefit for Yahoo's brand to give this advantageous reach away to Microsoft?
Does this mean the end of Search business for Yahoo! and the take over of Bing in the field? It seems like it, as Yahoo's latest efforts seem to be focusing elsewhere--recent release of their new homepage and focus in more unique, compelling editorial content with deals with AP and other news sources--and has almost given up on the search business all together and not bother to compete with the giant in the space--GOOGLE--and this latest partnership is just giving Bing the credentials to go after Google with Yahoo's help.
It is very sad indeed to see the direction Yahoo! has decided to take, as it is clearly uncertain what is going to happen to the online pioneer and its name after this contract ends. I think Bing gets the better deal out of the picture. I hope Yahoo's plan works out well for them after all and the brand doesn't go the direction MySpace is going or worse, it is finally sold to Microsoft altogether. This way perhaps Bing may be able to stand more strongly against Google, who owns over 70% of the search business market share.
I read this great article this past week on Media Post Search Insider's Newsletter: But Enough About BingHoo, Let's Talk About BingHoo, which provides with an excellent analysis on this BingHoo deal as they call it and what Yahoo! should expect out of the deal.
But Enough About BingHoo, Let's Talk About BingHoo
by Rob Garner , Wednesday, August 5, 2009
The Bing-rise/Yahoo!-fall last week, which makes now as good as time as any to start thinking about what it really means in the broad scope of "search engine marketing" - for both paid and natural search. I personally spent the better part of last week talking about and reflecting on the change, and I've written numerous thoughts on the implications. Given that there has been a little bit of time to let the news sink in, here are a few additional thoughts on what this change means in the long term for the search industry:
Two years is a long, long time in the search business. With all of the hype around this partnership, it is important that both paid and natural search marketers don't to get too over-amped about the immediate impact to their campaigns. Once the deal passes U.S. government scrutiny (at least six months), it may be anywhere between 18 to 24 months before Bing results are rolled out into Yahoo! pages. If you are currently engaged with a search agency, or are involved in an enterprise search campaign, then you are as familiar as you need to be with Bing results, for the time being. But watch and monitor developments closely.
Yahoo!'s market share will inevitably erode before Bing results get implemented. With Yahoo! exposed as having given up on search for an extended period of time, users will flock over to alternatives, most likely Google. But ultimately Bing wins either way, as Yahoo! is effectively put out of business as a search provider, though what Bing gains from Yahoo! will be much less later on.
Google's share and domination will rise. As I have stated in previous columns, Google will continue to dominate , and I see them going to as high as 85 percent total share in the coming months. While Bing wins in this deal at the expense of Yahoo!, the category leader also reaps the benefits of such a tremendous shift in the landscape. Google also gets share from Yahoo!, and there is a case to be made that Google is also getting category lift from Bing's $100MM ad campaign .
Bing will have to prove the quality of its traffic in the Yahoo! network before budget share increases. Budget shift in paid media is not a given for Bing, and perhaps one of its greatest challenges will be scaling its existing performance into the Yahoo! network. Bing generally performs well across many different verticals, but there is just one problem for marketers: There has never been enough available traffic from it to shift a substantial share of budget. With increased reach through Yahoo!'s share of search, they now have that opportunity. But how these campaigns react in Yahoo!'s various ad distribution deals off of the search page remains to be seen, and how they perform will be directly proportional to how many marketers increase their budgets to Bing.
A search pioneer falls. Having been a longtime user of Yahoo! search, syndicating Bing results is somewhat of a return to their roots; like the days where Inktomi or Google supplied the results, long before pay-per-click became a primary aspect of the landing page. In the early-mid 2000's, Yahoo! managed to grab a hold of virtually every major search play still standing - including Overture, AltaVista, FAST/AllTheWeb, among others. Effectively, most of this search legacy will be completely wiped out with the replacement of Bing results (though Yahoo! managed to kill most of them on their own), and there is nothing to indicate that Microsoft will be adopting any of these technologies at any major scale anytime soon.
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