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Friday, July 10, 2009

Stacking Up Makeaquick with Bing and Google

Hey again! It’s Colin with a special post loaded full of insight into the recent news of Google developing an operating system and Microsoft flaunting a new, powerful search engine. I got a chance to sit down with the CEO of Makeaquick.com, Egor, to get his reactions and perspective on this battle of business giants. The following is a question and answer type format from my conversation with the head honcho.


What was your reaction when you first visited Bing.com?

After looking at Bing.com my immediate thought is that the design and layout is not practical enough to be a number one search engine. For the amount invested, I would expect the design to be less overwhelming in appearance and a bit more functional. I was not presented with any distinguishing features different from Google or Yahoo, just an overwhelming picture. I cannot overemphasize the importance of a layout and design and understanding the vital role aesthetics play in public appeal. The picture in the background should be a selectable option because it takes away from the purpose of the site. There are some new features that Bing offers but I don’t see how they will drastically alter the search engine experience, especially if the user doesn’t know what those features are, because they are too hard to find, which should not be the case. The layout should provide a nice flow too all the new features that Bing.com is trying to present to the world.
What, to you, does an ideal search engine offer?
As of right now I would say Google offers pretty much everything a user might need. Their search results are relevant to key words and provide sponsored links at the top of the page. Bing.com offers related search results in addition to the entered search words, but my question is whether or not such a minor design addition will sway users from Google. Google is now working on an operating system that rivals Windows. Microsoft seems to be interested in attacking Google’s strength; the search engine market. I think that is a good move by Microsoft. Google has become a new way of accessing information. Until Bing.com better competes with the kind of design, features, and abilities of Google, Bing will not be much of a threat in the search market. Given the strength and reputation of Google’s products, I believe they will pose a strong threat to the operating system market, which is the core of Microsoft’s products and profits.

How might you relate Makeaquick.com to a site like Bing or Google?
Makeaquick has a similar layout to Bing in that the main page offers its viewers pixelated squares of information as the mouse cursor floats over them. Bing uses a randomized background picture and gives facts about the image, which has almost nothing to do with the purpose of a real search engine. It actually distracts the user from the purpose of going to the website. Makeaquick presents categorized pixel advertisements that link directly to an advertiser’s homepage. I believe a website should offer very specific features for users and allow them to quickly access the information they are looking for, not detour them away from what they are looking for.

As you know, Google is developing their Chrome operating system.  How might you advise Microsoft in handling this kind of competition
?

A way Microsoft could brush off the challenge would be to compete with Google’s products and hit them where it hurts, like the search market. There are cost-effective and creative changes the people behind Bing.com have to do to improve what they already have. Microsoft also has to become more competitive with different products and create new products that make their competitors envious; for example, like Apple has done with their line of iPod products. Microsoft is missing some simple things, like creating a product that looks edgy, is unique, yet simple and sharp, while also operating with consistent reliability. With so many tech savvy consumers and companies in the market, that is how products must work in this day and age.



You seem very confident about the direction and future of the Makeaquick.com enterprise.  Given your funding, and the $100 million Microsoft invested in just the marketing campaign for Bing.com, how do you expect to compete on the worldwide web?

Microsoft needs a team of unique, intelligent, artistic, imaginative and out of the box thinkers like Makeaquick.com has in order to create something special. You need to invest less and think more… get bright students from accredited and prestigious universities with unique young minds.  Give them a few computers, a small office and a million dollars and they will create and execute something special that will compete with the best that the web has too offer.  It might even propel Microsoft back to the top. I guarantee you that would happen if my team and I were offered that challenge.  Microsoft is spending $100 million to force people to campaign for a product when the same effect could have been made with public statement by Bill Gates or a viral advertising campaign that would cost no more than a mere $100,000!
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Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Let the battle begin: Microsoft vs. Google

What’s happening? It's Colin again for Makeaquick.com and I have got a hot topic for you today. Have you seen those advertisements lately, overstimulating your mind with information from top search results for keywords like ‘Hawaii’ and ‘tickets’? At the end of the commercial you are directed to a new search engine, excuse me I mean ‘decision-making’ engine. If you have no idea what I’m talking about watch the video below and you will hopefully gain more clarity throughout the rest of this post.

Basically Bing.com is Microsoft’s $100 million marketing campaign aimed at capturing a chunk of Google’s growing loyalists. It appears as though Microsoft’s main concern at this point is merely web surfers devoted to search engines and a better searching experience. If you want to see some of the ‘real’ people staking their claims of life before and after Bing.com, click on the linked words. The testimonials go as far as showing a user on a Google search page. 
The question arose in my mind whether or not Google would offer any sort of response to all this Bing.com hoopla and it has been confirmed that the minds behind Google Docs, Google Maps, and the expanding list of Google apps, are not focused on just search engine results. They are focused on a Google operating system; Google Chrome OS. Check out an AP reporting of it. The Google Chrome web browsing software was released in late 2008 and as of yesterday, plans are full speed ahead to get an open-source operating system on computers for consumers by the second half of 2010. According to reports, the OS will be designed for “budget-conscious consumers primarily interested in surfing the Web.” 
Okay so all this information is all fine and dandy but how does it relate to you, the consumer and Microsoft, the billion dollar software giant? Let’s start with you. When Google Chrome OS is available, you will have four major competitors for your business; Microsoft’s Windows, Mac OS X, Google Chrome, and Red Hat’s Linux. If you have been keeping up with my posts, you can probably guess which way I’ll lean. To be sure, I will continue investigating all options. Microsoft hopes consumers will continue to go and get a computer with Windows OS preloaded, curbing their software autonomy. This is where Google slides into play. Now computer shoppers will have to pause for a moment and think about which software giant they want curtailing their personal computing experience. Which one will you choose?
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Sunday, July 5, 2009

America the Beautiful

Hey Everyone! It's Colin again for Makeaquick.com. The Fourth of July has come and gone and once again all of us at Makeaquick.com have plenty of reasons to be proud Americans. We were all very fortunate to spend our holiday with close family and friends at an all American picnic. It was as traditional an Independence Day gathering as one might envision; juicy hamburgers, plump hot dogs, salads galore, fruit and veggie trays, and of course a light American lager to wash it all down.
With live music from the likes of the Whiskey Saints and Paul Chesney, everyone was pleasantly surprised when John Fogerty stopped in to a play a few patriotic classics before his evening set at the local Hollywood Bowl. As the day progressed I discovered the meaning of America’s birthday is observed differently by all kinds of citizens. Regardless of where you celebrated, or didn’t celebrate, odds are pretty good that your ears were tickled with some kind of music. For me, being in and around Los Angeles guaranteed a Michael Jackson cover. In my case I heard a solid, upbeat rendition of Billie Jean. It was nothing like the mellowed out acoustic cover by Death Cab for Cutie frontman, Ben Gibbard, floating around the web right now. Click here to listen to a couple covers that have been generated since the King of Pop's death.
Given my experiences on America’s 233rd birthday, I will leave you with a list of things I found to be truly “American.”
The Hamburger – Created in 1885 by “Hamburger Charlie” Nagreen when his meatballs weren’t selling at the Seymour Fair in Wisconsin. Charlie simply squashed his meatballs into a patty shape and started calling the innovation a hamburger sandwich.
Old Glory – The nickname given to the American flag by William Driver in the mid-1800s. Driver’s “Old Glory” is kept intact from the day in 1861, during the Civil War, when Tennessee succeeded from the Union and the flag was sewn inside a comforter for hidden protection.
Baseball – Around the same time the original Old Glory was being hidden in a comforter, Alexander Cartwright of the New York Knickerbockers was helping to mold the early European sport “rounder’s” into the game of baseball Americans witness today. The first American baseball team was the Cincinnati Red Stockings formed in 1869.
So to all you recovering from another Fourth of July holiday, we here at Makeaquick.com want you to embrace the freedom the United States of America offers and do something very American!
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