Facebook One Of The Top Search Engines? I Dunno About That!
I shouldn’t — but I couldn’t resist doing a quick poke at Facebook’s pronouncement that it is the “most used people search engine on the web.” Really? According to? Facebook gives some stats that perhaps back up this claim, but only if you consider Facebook a people search engine. I don’t. Not yet. It’s hard […]
pronouncement
that it is the “most used people search engine on the web.” Really? According
to? Facebook gives some stats that perhaps back up this claim, but only if you
consider Facebook a people search engine.
I don’t. Not yet. It’s hard for me to consider something a people search
engine when, until
last September, it didn’t allow most people to actually register with it. Of
course, I don’t need comScore’s
latest stats
to tell me Facebook is taking off since then. The drip-drip-drip of people
asking to be my friend since I joined up a few weeks ago lets me know it is
gaining ground.
It is a drip-drip, however, not a firehose blast. I’d wager most people I
actually know personally are not on it. Curious, I just searched for three
college friends. None of them are there. I’m not surprised, since I was in
college so long ago we didn’t have email addresses — something that was an
initial barrier to getting on Facebook.
By the way, I searched for all three of them on Google (violating
today’s Google Free
Friday proclamation, but I have a point to make). Google had all three listed
first for their names. Yahoo, Windows Live and Ask also all listed them first or
in the first of results.
In terms of people search, any major crawler is likely to be more
comprehensive in getting you some information about a person. And during a
recent discussion on people search, someone presented
stats that
about 30 percent of queries are people related. Apply that to Google, and its
chunk of “people search” is more than double Facebook.
Let’s dig into some numbers. Facebook posted that it does 500 million
searchers per day, making it “one of the top 20 search engines on the web, in
terms of number of searches.”
Heh. Let’s go with that for a second, however. Both
comScore and
NetRatings put Google at 4 billion searches for May 2007 in the US. In the
US! Worldwide, you’re probably looking at twice that figure (and Facebook is
almost certainly talking worldwide figures for itself). But let’s stick with US
figures for the general purpose search engines. Next highest is Yahoo at around
2 billion, then Microsoft around 700 million, then Ask and AOL both in the 400
million range. These are all rounded, but they make the point — if Facebook is
at 500 million, dude — you’re in the top four, not top 20!
Of course, care to estimate how many searches happen on Amazon each month? I
have no idea, and after some quick searching, I could only find Amazon
talking about processing
billions of queries worldwide. But 500 million searches per month wouldn’t
surprise me. So much of what you do at Amazon is search driven. So does that
make it one of the top search engines on the web?
Not at all. To me, “search engine” is short-hand for general purpose search,
for finding stuff overall. Unless you provide a comprehensive search experience,
please don’t go claiming to be one of the top search engines on the web.
That’s not to take away from the technical achievement Facebook is hitting.
That many searches is huge, and as a people search engine, it might well be a
leader in the space. But being a top people search engine is an entirely
different thing that being a top search engine, period.
As for being the top people search engine, more issues. There are lots of
“people search engines,” and what you get back from them can vary wildly. Is it
people search when I hit:
- Classmates, to find high school
friends - LinkedIn, a rival of Facebook
- Wink, which meta searches places like
Friendster and LinkedIn - Pipl, which
also meta search - Google PhoneBook,
which brings matches from public phone book records - Zoominfo, the long standing site
that searches for people info from the open web, among other sources - Spock, which seeks to be a people
search engine of choice, whenever it finally comes out of private beta
Some people will hit these places not seeking a particular person but people
in general, people to connect with. That’s much different than trying to locate
a known individual, which is what I’d consider a “people search.” Does Facebook
distinguish between the two? If so, what’s the bigger chunk.
I’d say before anyone declares themselves the biggest people search engine,
there are a lot of basic definitions that need to be put into place. As for just
taking a lot of searches and saying that makes you one of the most popular
search engines — don’t play that game, unless you let me find a needle in the
big old general haystack of the web.