79% drop in retailers’ ‘shopping’ integrations within Google US (infographic)

Apr 2, 2013 | E-commerce and E-retailing, Search engine marketing

Shopping integrations in Google US results have dropped dramatically, coinciding with Google Shopping becoming a paid for service in the US since October, according to a new study. The research, from Searchmetrics, also found that video also dipped and YouTube videos are much more likely to be included in integrations than other sources, such as […]

Shopping integrations in Google US results have dropped dramatically, coinciding with Google Shopping becoming a paid for service in the US since October, according to a new study.


The research, from Searchmetrics, also found that video also dipped and YouTube videos are much more likely to be included in integrations than other sources, such as Vimeo or Dailymotion.
The fall in shopping integration coincides with Google starting to charge retailers to use its Google Shopping service.
View an infographic from Searchmetrics higlighting the US shopping search trends below:
Searchmetrics_universal_search_infographic%20SMALL.jpg
View larger image
The previously free Google Shopping service, which gave retailers the opportunity of having their products displayed in shopping integrations for shopping related Google searches, switched to a pay-for-inclusion model in the US in October 2012. Retailers have since had to buy shopping related Product Listing Ads which incorporate product images, pricing and other information if they want to appear in Google’s shopping integrations.
Marcus Tober, CTO of Searchmetrics explained: “Shopping integrations are part of a number of Universal Search integrations or ‘blended search’ results under which Google blends boxes containing additional media within search pages to try and closely match what searchers are looking for – other examples are the video, image, map and news integrations. When searchers are looking for information for product purchases, the shopping integrations attract greater attention and generate high click-throughs because the product images stand out on the search page. But our data indicates there’s been a sharp fall in both the number of shopping integrations and the percentage of shopping compared with other universal search integrations. The timing of the trend correlates closely with Google Shopping becoming a paid-for service.”
Top Sources of shopping Integrations on Google.com (2012)
• Google: 52.02%
• Amazon: 11.82%
• Ebay: 4.28%
• Sears: 1.21%
• Others: 30,67%
Searchmetrics analyzed search results for millions of keywords on Google.com during 2012, noting the frequency and type of Universal Search integrations displayed. The data indicates that while shopping appeared in 20% of all Universal Search integrations within Google searches at the start of 2012, by the end of the year it was down to just 5%. And as can be seen in the table above, Google’s own listings accounted for over half of all shopping integrations. This means searchers are led to a product listings page provided by Google itself rather than seeing individual retailers’ own shopping integrations with direct links to the retailers’ web sites.
Another key trend highlighted by the research was video integrations decreasing by 14%, while the percentage of image integrations (32%) stayed constant, with the total number of different images that appeared having grown by 28%. Despite the fall in video integrations, by the end of 2012, video still appeared in 62% (the highest percentage) of all Universal Search integrations (see table underneath).
Share of Universal Search integrations on Google.com (Dec 2012)
• Video: 62%
• Images: 32%
• Maps: 7%
• News: 6%
• Shopping: 5%
(Note: The table above indicates the percentage of all Universal Search integrations which included video, images, maps, news and shopping in Dec 2012. The sum total of Universal Search integrations is greater than 100% because Google often shows more than one Universal Search integration for the same search query)
Most (8 out of 10) video integrations are for video content hosted on Google property, YouTube, which has significantly more video integrations than Dailymotion and Vimeo, the second and third most common sources for video integrations. The study also found that video integrations from YouTube were generally positioned higher up on search results pages than video content that is displayed in integrations from other sources.
“Our data indicates that if a business wants to have its video content appearing in video integrations on Google, it would do well to make sure it is on YouTube and of course it needs to ensure its videos are well optimized for the keywords and phrases that are being targeted,” said Marcus Tober.
Another finding from the Searchmetrics study was that news integrations increased by 70% during 2012, with Google showing news integrations from a bigger number of news sources (web domains).
The data from the study is highlighted in a Searchmetrics infographic and the Searchmetrics White Paper based on its Universal Search study can be found here:
http://www.searchmetrics.com/en/universal-search-study/

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