Houston Community News >> Chinese Users Prefer Google Results
6/10/2007-- What do you get
when 2,740 Chinese internet users don’t know which search engine they’re using?
Surprisingly the outcome is that the majority favors the Google results over
Baidu’s results.
Chinese research company Intelliconsulting released a report (in Chinese) on the
search result preferences of 2,740 web users that participated in a 12 day blind
test.
Whenever they did a search during the test period they didn’t know whether they
were searching with Baidu or Google. The software used for this Blind Test was
developed by Tsinghua University (Beijing). More information on the method
Intelliconsulting used is not available at this time.
Participants had to rate 8 different type of search results: news, Internet and
technology, finance/business, entertainment, shopping/dining,
travel/transportation, science/culture/education, and government services/public
information.
The main conclusion of the research is that Google delivers more satisfying
results than Baidu. 48.2% for Google, 39.8% for Baidu.
The results show as well that the differences in satisfaction with the search
results between Baidu and Google gets bigger as the age of the user increases.
The same goes for education. The more educated an Internet user is, the more he
prefers Google results.
Another noteworthy part of the research is that the more a respondent uses
search engines, the better he likes the results of Google.
The respondents were also asked what they didn’t like about the search results.
The instability of Google’s website, thanks mostly to the great Chinese
firewall, was seen as negative as well as having no page-caching. The fact that
Google doesn’t offer a search functionality for free mp3’s and other
downloadable entertainment was also not appreciated.
The instability of Google’s website is a matter of politics, mp3 search is more
likely a matter of law I think.
35.7% of the participants indicated that they didn’t appreciate that Baidu’s
natural search results were mixed with advertising. The respondents also didn’t
like the fact that results don’t include Chinese content from websites outside
of China and that they don’t seem objective. (note, read filtered)
These are interesting results considering that Google’s China search engine
mostly makes headlines with their decreasing market share and political issues
about filtering results. The survey shows that even though Google is still
trailing far behind Baidu, it doesn’t seem to be because of their search
results.
Making sure the website gets more stable is key at this stage and offering more
“entertainment” search will likely attract more younger users.
At this stage I can’t see Google directly starting to offer the hugely popular
“entertainment” search yet on the Google.cn domain for legal reasons but as
mentioned in my last overview of what happened in search in the last weeks, they
may be experimenting with this on other domains.
Baidu can counter by making their natural results less advertiser biased and
becoming more objective. The latter is easier said than done as they’re based in
China and will have to comply even more with all the censor regulations.
The coming years, when the young internet generation matures (and downloading
becomes less important in their daily life), will show if people will stick with
Baidu or venture out more to Google.
(Contributed by SearchEngineJournal)