Ask.com believes it could profit from Yahoo and Google's activity outside the
search space in recent months, as it seeks to take market share from its arch
rivals.
Cesar Mascaraque, European managing director at Ask, told
vnunet.com at the launch
of the firm's
new web site
today that it has been working on reducing latency, and improving the relevancy
of searches and the user interface.
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"We have been working hard while our competitors have been
mapping
the Moon or
fighting
aggressive takeovers," he explained. "Our focus on search and understanding
our core users is key and has helped us over the last 12 months."
Mascaraque said that Ask is not concerned about Yahoo and Google's large
presence on toolbars, which are pre-loaded onto certain devices, and added that
the firm is seeking to expand its own distribution channels in the coming year.
"The toolbar is dead. It's a 1990s product [and] the new world is slightly
different," he argued.
"We have an amazing brand, which is a very strong thing to have. But I don't
want to rely on that strength alone. I want us to be more aggressive with
distribution."
Key enhancements to the new Ask.com site include a 67 per cent reduction in
loading times for new pages, and the blending of video, images, news, blogs and
other results categories onto one page.
Ask has also unveiled new technologies - Direct Answers from Database, Direct
Answers from Search and AnswerFarm - which it said will help provide relevant
answers and responses directly from sources such as Wikipedia.
"We are a search [service] that can deliver relevant answers to any
questions. If the queries are business related we can answer them too," said
Mascaraque.
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