"The longer people have been using the Internet, the more likely it is that Google will be their search engine of choice..."


Study: Google users wealthier, more Net savvy


Juan Carlos Perez, IDG News Service - MacCentralWed Dec 7,12:51 PM ET

U.S. residents who prefer Google's search engine tend to be richer and have
more Internet experience than those who primarily use competing search
services from Microsoft, Yahoo and America Online, a new study has found.

The longer people have been using the Internet, the more likely it is that
Google will be their search engine of choice, according to a survey of 1,000
U.S. Internet users conducted by investment banking and research firm S.G.
Cowen & Co. LLC.

Moreover, people whose primary search engine is Google are more likely to
have household incomes above $60,000 than people who use competing search
engines, according to the survey, whose results S.G. Cowen published in a
report Monday.

Google also emerged as the search engine of choice, with 52 percent of
respondents choosing it as their primary engine for general Web searches.
Yahoo came in second with 22 percent, while Microsoft's MSN and AOL tied for
third place with 9 percent. Ask Jeeves Inc. rounded out the top five with 5
percent. (Google powers AOL's general Web searches.)

If Google users are wealthier and savvier online, and if Google is the
search engine of choice for more than half of U.S. Internet users, then
these survey results reinforce the notion among many businesses that it is
critical for them to appear in Google search results or Google search ads or
both, more so than in competing search engines.

It should be noted that studies such as this one sketch general patterns and
all major search engines draw varying but significant amounts of experienced
and savvy users to their services. For example, Kurt Norris, who lives in
Pace, Florida, and works in local government, has been using search engines
for about seven years and is a devout fan of Yahoo Search because he finds
that it is the most user-friendly service.

Yahoo's is in fact the only search engine he uses for all his search
activities, he told IDG News Service in an e-mail interview. Norris is an
active user, tapping Yahoo Search on a daily basis both at work and at home,
and doesn't limit his activities to general Web search. He also queries
Yahoo's blog, news, and white pages search services, he said.

S.G. Cowen also projects that paid search, the type of online advertising
driving most of Google's revenue, will progressively tower over all other
forms of online advertising in the coming years. The firm estimates that
U.S. advertisers will spend $6.1 billion in paid search this year, and $6.4
billion in all other forms of online ads, such as branded/display ads and
classified listings.

But starting in 2006, paid search will account for over half of all
spending, and increase its lead every year. In 2010, companies will spend
$17.3 billion in paid search and $12.4 billion in the other online ad
categories, according to S.G. Cowen. The firm predicts a compound annual
growth rate (CAGR) for paid search spending of 23 percent between 2005 and
2010, and a CAGR of 14 percent for the other online ad formats.

In another report issued Monday, investment banking and research firm Piper
Jaffray & Co. predicted that global online advertising will exceed $55
billion in 2010, a 27 percent CAGR from 2005 levels, and said that this
"will likely prove to be a conservative scenario."

source:
news.yahoo.com/s/macworld/20051207/tc_macworld/googleusers20051207&pr
inter=1;_ylt=AqmeTjOwvr4G2e8s8G66VxzQn6gB;_ylu=X3oDMTA3MXN1bHE0BHNlYwN0bWE-

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