The only thing missing? What channel it's playing on in my area
Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 8:50 am
More Queries will Send Less Traffic Google & Bing are both doing more to make their visitors stickier and get their queries answered without ever having to leave the engine. This is a good product practice for both companies, and I'm surprised Google's taken so long to move away from their "get people off Google" point-of-view, but it's definitely happening. Check out some recent examples: San Diego Chargers SERPs Everything I need to know is right there - the last game score, the record, the opponent, their next match day and time.
I don't even have to complete my query! Google's france email list got that weather report sitting in the suggest box. They wrote about this feature here which launched last week. Google O/S had another good post on the topic. Bing results for Alaska Air Flight 49 Thankfully, I'm not actually headed to Kodiak, but those results are pretty spiffy, and are likely to prevent me from needing to visit Alaskaair.
Com and get that flight info. Bing Fedex SERPs The customer service number is something Bing's started to provide more and more (though there's one company even they don't have that data on). With Fedex, you don't even need to leave Bing to track a package (Google also offers similar functionality). My perception is that the more the engines can apply "instant answers" to search queries, the more they will, and the less any other sites will see traffic from those queries.
I don't even have to complete my query! Google's france email list got that weather report sitting in the suggest box. They wrote about this feature here which launched last week. Google O/S had another good post on the topic. Bing results for Alaska Air Flight 49 Thankfully, I'm not actually headed to Kodiak, but those results are pretty spiffy, and are likely to prevent me from needing to visit Alaskaair.
Com and get that flight info. Bing Fedex SERPs The customer service number is something Bing's started to provide more and more (though there's one company even they don't have that data on). With Fedex, you don't even need to leave Bing to track a package (Google also offers similar functionality). My perception is that the more the engines can apply "instant answers" to search queries, the more they will, and the less any other sites will see traffic from those queries.