Google continued its slow but steady march towards greater dominance in the US. It managed to control 66.8 percent of the search market in June, 0.1 percentage points more than in the previous month, according to comScore.
The growth is too small to mean anything for Google, but it's meaningful for its competitors.
Microsoft's Bing managed to add 0.2 percentage points last month, going from 15.4 percent to 15.6 percent in June.
Yahoo, as always, is the big loser, going from 13.4 percent of search traffic in May to just 13 percent in June, the biggest monthly drop in quite a while now.
Microsoft should be glad that, at least, most of Yahoo's loss is going to Bing, but the problem is that it's not all of it did.
Bing-powered search went from 28.8 percent to 28.6 market share from May to June. It started out the year at 29.3 percent.
Source
The growth is too small to mean anything for Google, but it's meaningful for its competitors.
Microsoft's Bing managed to add 0.2 percentage points last month, going from 15.4 percent to 15.6 percent in June.
Yahoo, as always, is the big loser, going from 13.4 percent of search traffic in May to just 13 percent in June, the biggest monthly drop in quite a while now.
Microsoft should be glad that, at least, most of Yahoo's loss is going to Bing, but the problem is that it's not all of it did.
Bing-powered search went from 28.8 percent to 28.6 market share from May to June. It started out the year at 29.3 percent.
Source