Posts Tagged ‘merger’

The Yahoo-Bing Data Transition is Complete

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

The Yahoo-Bing search transition has been progressing for a while now. And at Windy City Strategies, we’ve been keeping you up to speed every step of the way. But the companies have now announced that the transition of organic search results in the U.S. and Canada from Bing to Yahoo is finished.

Web searches. Image searches. Video searches. For desktop and mobile experiences. The Yahoo-Bing search relationship is now a completely shared one. However, the companies are still working on the migration of Yahoo! Search ad results to Microsoft adCenter so search advertisers can utilize a single service to manage both their Yahoo and Bing campaigns. The companies are sticking to their original goal of having this transition complete before the busy holiday season.

Optimizing Tips for the New Yahoo-Bing Merger

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

The Yahoo-Bing Merger is upon us. So, does that mean you have to learn yet another search engine optimization strategy? Not really. The moral of this latest news is that if you’re already optimizing for Microsoft Bing, you’re ready.

And you better be. Because Yahoo has already begun testing both organic and paid search listings from Microsoft. In fact, Yahoo reports that 25% of current search traffic may already be seeing organic Microsoft results. Whereas, only 3.5% are currently seeing paid listings from Microsoft adCenter.

The Yahoo Search Marketing Team has also provided some organic SEO tips in regards to the merger as well.

  1. Compare your Yahoo! Search and Bing organic rankings for your keywords.
  2. Modify your paid search campaigns to compensate for any organic changes you anticipate.
  3. Optimize your website for Microsoft, since Bing listings will be displayed for approximately 30% of search queries post-merger.

Not extraordinarily helpful. But if you’re Bing-literate, you’re ready for the merger. If not…find a search engine expert. Full integration should be complete by August or September. And despite a lot of back-end changes, Yahoo’s user-facing interface should remain familiar.