Date:14/06/2009 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2009/06/14/stories/2009061455661100.htm 

Front Page 

Bing comes with a bang into search business 

T. Ramachandran and Sruthi Krishnan 

Microsoft's new tool is designed to make user's life simpler 

KOCHI/CHENNAI: In Chinese, it means a certain answer, or response to a query. 
It is also short, easy to spell and say and more attractive than 'Live Search.'
And so Bing was born.

Microsoft unveiled its new search engine called Bing ( 
www.bing.com
) recently in a bid to muscle its way into the Google-dominated world of search.

The need for Bing, according to Rishi Srivastava, Marketing Office, Microsoft 
Consumer & Online India, stemmed from a "very real dissatisfaction with search"
as it is today. 

According to the Microsoft's research, the results for 50 per cent of the 
queries do not satisfy users, who end up abandoning or refining their search 
effort.


In an attempt to make the user's life simpler, Bing "has been designed to meet 
the needs of today's searchers who are using search for purposes beyond ten
blue links on a page," says Mr. Srivastava. 

The features highlighted by Mr. Srivastava have two aims - making search easier 
and more organised. 

For instance, the autosuggest feature that guesses what you are trying to type, 
or the 'document preview' which lets you hover over the search result and
see a preview of the site's content, are features that make the searching 
process simpler. 

Instant answers 

The 'Best Match' is an attempt to reduce the number of clicks, by trying to 
provide the relevant information for your query up front. In case of direct
queries, the 'instant answers' feature does what its name indicates - say, you 
are searching for a flight number, the recent flight information will be
displayed up front.

'Quick Tabs' is a feature that helps make search more organised. "For example, 
when searching for a favourite musician, the Quick Tabs let you filter results
by albums, biography, videos and images," says Mr. Srivastava. 

The video search also provides a preview if you hover over a particular result. 
And instead of navigating from one page to another all results are offered
in an 'infinitely' scrolling page. Bing also offers image, news and map-based 
search.

Helping travellers 

It has also identified shopping, travel, local business and information, and 
health-related research as areas of particular focus. Bing Travel, which has
already been launched, offers tools and and features to help travellers make 
'more informed decisions.' In the Indian context, though it comes up with
flight and hotel information relating to the country, the prices are listed in 
dollars, which seems to indicate that it is not exactly tuned to the local
market as of now.

The question is: Has the Bing made an impression on the users? "It has barely 
raised the Microsoft's share of clicks by about 5 per cent from what it had
earlier, which is a market share gain of less than 1 per cent overall," says 
Mahesh Murthy, founder of Pinstorm, a digital marketing firm, which is also
into search engine advertising. There had been a rise in traffic to Bing from 
June 1 to 6, he says, but that had since declined by half and was dropping
every day back towards its original level.

Beta version 

But Bing now is in its Beta version. And Mr. Srivastava says, "We recognise 
that we still have much work to do in certain markets to achieve competitive
parity, and until we reach those critical milestones, we will keep the beta tag 
on the product."


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