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How Microsoft Can Beat Google In Search

By Michael Hickins | May 27, 2009

Would-be Google competitors in Web search make two fundamental mistakes that doom their efforts from the outset: one is competing with Google on its own terms, and the other is drumming up hype that their search engines can’t possibly match.

But Microsoft’s new Web search engine, apparently dubbed Bing, may well avoid both pitfalls and emerge as a true giant-killer.

The key is changing the rules of the game, because Google has indisputably won the search game as it’s now played, which is search based on keywords. Vendors have retired their butlers and re-branded themselves to look more “aLive,” all to no avail, because the insurgents were trying to beat Google based on better keyword search. And fighting Google on its own terms is like trying to face Goliath with a full suit of armor.

And as Malcolm Gladwell recently described, fighting in a traditional manner would have been playing into the Philistine’s giant hands. David’s genius was to shuck the armor, and the elaborate ritual that went with it, and to use his speed and agility to beat Goliath, not as his own game, but at an entirely different game governed by David’s rules. Gladwell reports that political scientist Ivan Arreguín-Toft found that underdogs have a much better chance of beating Goliaths when they fight like Davids (63.6%) than when they don’t (28.5%). “When the world has to play on Goliath’s terms, Goliath wins,” Gladwell wrote.

Gladwell noted another oddity: most underdogs actually try to win by using rules established by the favorites, noting that George Washington almost lost the Revolutionary War when he abandoned the guerrila tactics in favor of British-style orderly battlefield strategies, because those were the rules and values he was brought up to respect. And this is exactly what Google’s competitors have been doing all this time — perhaps until now. As my colleague Erik Sherman wrote yesterday, competitors have been attempting refinements to an existing model.

Joe Wilcox is one long-time Microsoft observer who expects that Bing will allow users to search the Web using natural language rather than keywords, adapting technology gained with Microsoft’s acquisition of PowerSet, that would allow people to search in ways that correspond more closely to how they actually think. “It’s like ‘where are my car keys,’ not, ‘car keys.’ People don’t think in key words,” he said.

Wilcox told me, “that’s the only way they can beat Google — they can’t play the keyword game.”

Yahoo is clearly thinking about changing the ground rules of search as well, as its CTO Ari Balogh recently noted during a technology conference sponsored by Reuters.

Core to great experiences for people online may not necessarily be this version of search… I believe search is going to be far richer … there’s a whole other round or two to go in the search game and that’s where we intend on playing.

Google’s entire business model is based on keywords, making it difficult for Google to respond quickly to a shift away from that model. Microsoft, on the other hand, has nothing to lose by trying something totally new. If Microsoft really is changing the nature of search, Bing will be a gaudier hit than the Bada Bing.

[Image source: Wikimedia.org]

Michael Hickins is a professional writer and journalist with a passion for ferreting out the intersections between technology and culture.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Microsoft launches first TV campaign for Google rival Bing

    Campaign - 172 days 15 hours 36 minutes ago

    The ad is part of a $100 million multi-platform campaign created by JWT and is designed to show how Bing can simplify search and help users make better decisions. Starting with a number of famous internet clips, including "afro ninja" and "keyboard cat", the ad continues with a barrage of flashing images and the words "search overload" flashing...

  • Microsoft launches first TV campiagn for Google rival Bing

    Campaign - 172 days 15 hours 36 minutes ago

    The ad is part of a $100 million multi-platform campaign created by JWT and is designed to show how Bing can simplify search and help users make better decisions. Starting with a number of famous internet clips, including "afro ninja" and "keyboard cat", the ad continues with a barrage of flashing images and the words "search overload" flashing...

  • Microsoft and Yahoo unite on search, in revolt against Google dominance

    VentureBeat - 118 days 9 hours 50 minutes ago

    Microsoft and Yahoo have announced an agreement that lets Microsoft’s Bing search engine take over Yahoo’s search site, and in turn gives Yahoo control over premium search advertising for both companies. The deal significantly changes the landscape of the search advertising market, a fundamental driver of much of the new Web economy....

  • Microsoft delays UK launch of Bing until next year

    Marketing Magazine - 14 days 16 hours 44 minutes ago

    Sources close to Microsoft said the UK marketing activity for Bing would also be delayed until at least the first quarter of 2010, and possibly later. The site has been in beta testing since June, with no UK marketing activity since. VCCP Search managing director Paul Mead said: 'The user experience from the UK perspective is not living up to...

  • That's One Way To Grab Search Traffic

    TechDirt - 168 days 11 hours 47 minutes ago

    When Microsoft launched its new Bing search engine recently, we didn't really know what to say about it. Some of us felt like Microsoft was trying to win the last battle against Google, rather than looking ahead to the next one; others pointed to pieces saying that Bing seemed more about knocking off Yahoo than Google, which it looks to have...

 
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  •  
    1

    YegorK

    05/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How Microsoft Can Beat Google In Search

    Mike,
    Great point about the search underdogs trying to beat Google playing by Google?s rules. Actually, at this point everybody seems to be playing in the same field.

    All search players are still confined to various ways of interpreting exact definitions. Powerset uses a sophisticated natural language parser (licensed from Xerox PARC) to find subjects, verbs, objects, synonyms, and other elements for indexing. It means that the solution still relies on exact definitions (keywords).

    Brainware plays by totally different rules, because it does not rely on keywords at all ?it?s using a patented n-gram approach that gives it unique capabilities of an ?unintelligent machine:?
    http://www.infoworld.com/t/tech-industry-analysis/case-unintelligent-machines-903


  •  
    2

    Pala98

    05/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How Microsoft Can Beat Google In Search

    While I do agree that people, at least Americans, are being dumbed down, I do not agree with the assertion that people to not think in terms of key words. But then perhaps I?m just an old fart.

    I graduated high school in 1975, college in 1984 and graduate school in 1992. In some course of study in each of those educational environments, be it mathematics, the arts or science (natural, computer and library), establishing, identifying and using key words, figures or symbols was elemental to the learning process.

    In fact key words can be liken to the ?bold print? method of studying, made famous by Matthew Bodine in the movie Gross Anatomy - Bodine?s character, a medical student, crammed for exams by only reading the bold print in course text books. Anyone who understands the convention used to abbreviate words, think texting, should understand key word search. Or how about Cliff Notes - boil it down and tell me only what I need to know

    It works the same with search. Type only the words that have relevance to what you want to find.

    I?ve been enjoying fresh watermelon lately, perhaps too much so. Curious about the caloric content I went to Google and typed in ?calories watermelon?, not ?how many calories are there in a serving of watermelon??

    On the first search screen Google provided several links to websites that on their main page, gave me the information I sought (37 calories per 122 grams, about 4.3 ounces).

    Now to be fare, I just tested the two searches mentioned above. The key word search returned 343,000 listings in .14 seconds with the top listing giving me the answer without having to click the link.

    The natural language search returned 119,000 listings in .33 seconds. The first ten links which I had to click through, gave me lots of information about avocados, bananas and yes, watermelon but not what I was looking for. I finally found what I was looking for after I scrolled down a screen and clicked on the 12th link.

    All that work has made me hungry and look, its time for lunch ? boy, how time flies. Care for some watermelon?

    If people don?t think key words for search, perhaps they should. Maybe instead of their lives being managed by a bunch of software engineers, they could become one.

  •  
    3

    m583

    06/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How Microsoft Can Beat Google In Search

    I kind of disagree about the keywords. If a search engine can't beat google with keywords, it can't beat google with natural language. Adding natural language makes it harder for the search engine - it would only be an added bonus if you already had a comparable search engine.

    That is because natural language doesn't improve your ability to communicate with the search engine - it just makes it more 'natural' - a plus, but it probably won't turn the tables of search engines. Most people take only a few weeks of using google until thinking about searches in keywords is just natural for them - and I think unless the natural language search was phenominal, it would probably misunderstand what you are looking for more often.

  •  
    4

    Michael Hickins

    06/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How Microsoft Can Beat Google In Search

    Yep, most people don't even realize they're using keywords when they search--they just do so naturally. We've come a long way from and/not queries.

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