
Competition In Search Engine Market
Author(s) -
Edison Tse,
Wugang Zhao
Publication year - 1970
Publication title -
journal of business strategies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2162-6901
pISSN - 0887-2058
DOI - 10.54155/jbs.28.2.123-150
Subject(s) - spamdexing , search engine , search engine optimization , competition (biology) , search analytics , china , market share , business , industrial organization , marketing , computer science , world wide web , political science , web search query , ecology , biology , law
Google has been very successful in becoming the dominant search engine platformin the US and Western countries. In contrast to its success in the US and Westerncountries, Google does not have much luck in some Asian countries such as Chinaand Korea. Google is far behind in terms of search market share in China and Korea.In this paper, we model the search engine market as a two-sided markets model andanalyze the industry structure and competition of the search engine market. First, wepresent a mathematical model for a general search engine two-sided market. Then weuse the model to analyze the search engine history and explain why multiple searchengines could co-exist in the early days of the search engine history. We also explainhow Google, a latecomer in the search market, could become the leading search engine,and how Google has strengthened its leading position. Next we apply the modelto China and Korea’s search markets and analyze how Google could lose the game tolocal search companies. In the end, we propose some strategies on how search enginemarket leaders could maintain and strengthen their leading positions.