Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Google developing keyboard for iPhone in hopes of boosting search volumes — report

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According to a report yesterday in The Verge, Google is about to release its own third-party keyboard for the iPhone. The report says that the keyboard will employ swiping/gesture-based typing and predictive text.

Google’s objective is apparently to increase the number of searches coming from iOS devices, the iPhone in particular. With the release of iOS 8 Apple allowed third party apps to replace its own keyboard.

While there are numerous options today the two most popular replacement keyboards for the iPhone are Swype and Swiftkey. Swype was acquired by Nuance in 2011 and Swiftkey was just bought this year by Microsoft. Apple doesn’t provide app-install numbers but Swiftkey, for example, has more than 50 million installs on Android.

This analysis, cited by The Verge, argues that most smartphone users do less than one mobile search per day. However there are tiers of users, some of who do a lot of mobile searching and others who do less. In 2012 I conducted a US-based survey (n=1,500 smartphone owners) and found that nearly half the audience didn’t use Google on their phones, while 14 percent of respondents conducted more than 30 searches per month. If I were to filed that survey today I suspect the number of mobile searchers would be larger.

As has been discussed exhaustively over the past several years, apps have siphoned off search volume and moved Google away from dead center of content discovery on mobile devices. That said, Google famously stated last year that there were more searches in the US coming from mobile devices than PCs. And Google’s mobile revenues have been steadily gaining.

Google has done numerous things to try and put itself back into the center of the user experience on mobile. AMP, app indexing, conversational search, predictive search and other innovations are intended to improve the mobile user experience and draw users into more frequent engagement with Google. Google’s mobile strategy is multi-faceted and this third party keyboard should be seen in that larger context.

Court documents also showed that Google has paid roughly $1 billion in 2014 to remain the default search engine on the iPhone. In addition, Google dominates mobile search by much larger margins than its desktop share vs. rivals Yahoo and Bing.

I’m skeptical that a branded keyboard, however, will add materially to mobile search volumes on the iPhone. But it’s possible.

The post Google developing keyboard for iPhone in hopes of boosting search volumes — report appeared first on Search Engine Land.



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