Oh, Bing—always in Google’s shadow, and Google has a BIG shadow. Google enjoys a lot of attention: It’s the most visited site in the world and generates 3.5 billion searches every day. Google is integrated into our lives, our technology, our politics, and even our language—“Google” is literally now synonymous with “search for something online.”

But Bing is a different story. Since launching 10 years ago, saying it hasn’t attracted the same attention is an understatement. Bing.com is only the twenty-fifth most visited site on the web, and it spends very little money marketing itself to attract new users. And you’re not likely to hear someone utter the words “Bing it” or proudly proclaim themselves as a Bing user. At best, Bing is largely ignored. At worse, Bing is the butt of the joke.

So, really, who uses Bing anyways?

You. You probably use Bing. Here’s how.

1. Nearly half of the US searches on Bing

126 million unique US users performed 6 billion searches on the Bing network in March 2019, according to ComScore data. Today, Bing controls 36% of the US desktop search market. Wait … what?

That’s no typo. Almost half of the US runs a search powered by Bing every month. That’s not saying that everyone turns to Bing.com for every search—but many users are “bi-searchual” and use both Google and Bing powered search engines to perform different tasks or use different search engines across their different devices. Still, 66 million Americans don’t use Google and rely on a Bing-powered search engine to search online.

who uses bing pie chart

The fact that many users search on more than one platform has surprising implications for a lot of advertisers. Because many searchers may first search for you on Bing, SMBs who start advertising on Bing will often see 26% more branded searches on Google, as well.

Microsoft is a tech giant, no doubt. Today there are more than 1.5 Billion devices powered by Windows, with over 900 million using Windows 10. And that number is growing quickly—particularly in the workplace, where most devices are powered by Windows. In fact, you’re likely reading this on a Windows device right now. There’s no surprise to the reach of Microsoft.

Now, Microsoft also owns a search engine called “Bing.” Unsurprisingly, all these Windows 10 devices also direct a lot of traffic to their own search engine.

who uses bing? Windows devices chart

The Bing logo might not be plastered all over you PC, but that search bar in the bottom corner of your computer—that’s a fast track to Bing. Ask Cortana a question, and she’ll happily Bing it for you. Those searches from the lock screen? All of it’s Bing!

Bing search bar

3. Bing is integrated with other Microsoft products

Microsoft’s more than just your hardware or operating system. Even if you’re an Apple loyalist, you likely use some of Microsoft’s other products and may be using Bing without realizing it!

Edge / Internet Explorer

The default browser that comes installed on every PC—Microsoft’s Edge or Internet Explorer is still used by a healthy share of users—making up 8% and 6.7% of the US Desktop browser market. And with this combined 15% of the desktop market—Bing is also their default search engine. And among these people who are using their default browser, very few think to change their default search engine.

Bing browser

Microsoft Office, Outlook, Word, Excel, Teams, Skype, and More!

The 1.2 billion Office users might be using Bing without noticing it, as well! If you’ve ever typed into the search bar on the ribbon or right clicked onto a keyword to search within an email or a document—you’ve Bing’ed it! Outside of Office, other Microsoft apps like Skype and Teams also integrate with Bing for their search results.

XBox

Even away from the office and their computers, Microsoft holds the attention of over 65 million active gamers relaxing at home with their Xbox console. And in the moments between the action, when players pause to search for the newest games, apps, or dinner—they’ll find themselves searching on Bing on their Xbox!

4. Voice search through Cortana and Alexa is powered by Bing

Window’s voice assistant Cortana is plugged into all your Windows ware—and it should be no surprise that Cortana keeps her voice search within the Microsoft family with Bing. In fact, Cortana is responsible for 25% of all searches through the Windows 10 taskbar.

But Bing gets much more search from another household name: Alexa. That’s right, Amazon’s Alexa puts Bing into 100 million households! That number is only expected to grow as Alexa becomes Facebook Portal’s voice assistant of choice, too.

Amazon Alexa and Windows Cortana

5. Dozens of search engines partner with Bing

Default search engines aside, maybe you don’t type in bing.com to search the web. Understandable. But if you’re not typing in Google.com before browsing the web, chances are you’re using a search engine that’s at least partially powered by Microsoft’s Bing. Microsoft partners with dozens of smaller search engines to power their results and ads, including:

  • Yahoo! (11.7% of the US Market Share)
  • AOL (~1% US Market Share)
  • DuckDuckGo (~1% US Market Share)
  • Ecosia
  • MSN
  • Lycos
  • Search.com
  • ClassifiedAds.com

And many, many more!

Bing search partners

Advertisers on Microsoft Adverting have a unique advantage over Google Ads, as well. In addition to being able to serve ads across all these search engines through one platform, they can also review the performance of their ads on individual engines and either target or exclude them from their search campaigns.

Many people turn to search to begin shopping, but neither Google nor Bing search own an ecommerce monopoly online. To be found online, you need to be on more than just search. That’s why Microsoft has also partnered with major ecommerce platforms, including:

  • Amazon
  • OfferUp
  • GumTree

Bing ecommerce stats

As a result, Bing reaches much more than a third of all online retail searches. These audiences outside of the Bing search result page are highly engaged. Advertisers looking to reach these audiences have seen success within their shopping campaigns across multiple industries on Bing. On average:

  • Bing shopping campaigns have a 45% higher ad click through rate (CTR) than on Google
  • Bing’s average cost per click (CPC) on shopping ads is 30% lower than Google’s average.
  • The average cost to acquire a customer (CPA) was about 40% lower through Bing shopping than on Google shopping.

shopping-ads-benchmarks-bing-ctr

7. International audiences are flocking to Bing

The United States certainly has the most searchers on Bing, but that gap is closing quickly internationally. With the advent of Windows 10, more searches are powered by Bing than ever before. In the United Kingdom, nearly a quarter of all desktop searches are powered by Bing. In Canada, 22% of desktop searches are Bing. And even in Australia, Bing is beginning to see a meaningful 16% of their searches powered by Bing.

Internationally, 11 billion searches take place on Bing every month.

Bings international audiences

8. Bing attracts a different demographic than Google

Google’s mass market appeal makes targeting different demographics on Google a nuanced tactic. However, since more people search using Bing from their PCs, particularly from the work computers we see that Bing attracts a different audience than Google’s. For 40 hours a week, Bing has a strong reach into these working white collar professionals’ searches. Overall, we see that Bing reaches an audience that is:

  • Slightly more mature, averaging 45 years old (vs the US average of 38).
  • More educated, with 50% having some college degree, and 17% with an advanced degree.
  • More affluent, with a third having a household income over $100k. The average Bing searcher spends 35% more when shopping online than through Google.
  • More likely to be married (46%) and have children at home (30%)

who uses bing? demographic graph

Although Bing might earn 36% of the US search market share on desktops across all industries, there are some industries where Bing is an even larger player. Where many Bing users use Bing on their work computers, we see that 44% of all business and finance related paid search clicks occur on the Bing Search Network.

Similarly, in verticals that often require a longer time to research a purchase like automotive (40%), real estate (39%), and travel (37%), users are more likely to eventually search across device and across networks and search on Bing.

Where the Bing search audience is also a little older than the US average, it also performs very well in the healthcare industry, where it attracts 47% of all paid search clicks.

who uses bing? industry graph

10. 500,000 advertisers rely on Bing

Many people use Bing without knowing it, but Bing’s had 100 consecutive months of market share growth over the past years—and that’s become a poorly kept secret amongst advertisers. Earlier this year, Microsoft announced that 500,000 advertisers serve ads on Bing through Microsoft Adverting. And although half a million advertisers sound like a lot, it’s a fraction of the tens of millions of advertisers that use Google Ads—which means there’s much less competition on the Bing SERP.

That reduced competition means significant perks for those who are using Microsoft Advertising. We’ve benchmarked 1,200+ advertisers on Bing across different industries and noticed that:

  • Bing had almost a 50% higher ad click through rate (CTR) than Google.
  • Bing’s average cost per click (CPC) is 33% lower than Google’s.
  • The average cost to acquire a customer (CPA) was about 30% lower on Bing than on Google.

average cpc on bing ads

And managing Bing through Microsoft Advertising can be simple, too! In fact, you can simply import over your Google Ads campaigns to Microsoft Advertising to get started. As you make changes to your Google campaigns, you can even choose which changes you want to import over every day to Microsoft Advertising.

Bing’s much bigger than you think and as the secret gets out, advertisers are noticing. If you’re not advertising on Microsoft Advertising, you’re missing a third of the market, often at times when they’re looking to make bigger purchases.