Microsoft
has kicked off a new marketing campaign for Internet Explorer 9 that urges
users of rival browsers to run it, even if only sparingly for "a few sites
that you go to every day." The unusual approach, which Microsoft launched
last week on BrowserYouLovedToHate.com, a domain it registered last month, is part of Microsoft's
continued campaign to convince Windows users to stick with IE9, or if they've
switched browsers, to give it another try. "One of the more interesting
trends these days is the number of Chrome and Firefox enthusiasts who have
'added' Internet Explorer 9 into their browsing mix," said Roger
Capriotti, the director of IE marketing, in a blog post last
week. "You don't need to ditch your current browser, but there are
probably a few sites you go to each day like Facebook that
you can pin with IE9." "Pin" refers to IE9's ability to place
websites on the Windows 7 taskbar
for one-click access. The feature has been heavily promoted by Microsoft.
Even users who had defected to Google's Chrome or Mozilla's Firefox should run IE9, if only
occasionally. "It's the perfect complement to whatever browser you use for
daily tasks”. Capriotti also couched IE9 as a "comeback" for Internet
Explorer, and said that the browser has been in "many ways ... a turning
point" for Microsoft. Browser usage share data doesn't support his
argument. In the year since IE9's launch, the total usage share of IE has
fallen 5.5 percentage points, a loss that represents about 9.4% of IE's March
2011 share, according to Web measurement company Net Applications. During that
same period, Chrome grew by 56.5%, adding 6.8 percentage points. Almost since
IE9's debut, Microsoft has ignored IE's continued decline and has instead
focused on the growth of its newest browser among Windows 7 users, a
combination the company has regularly claimed is the only metric that matters. In
February, IE9 accounted for 30.1% of all browsers running on Windows 7,
Capriotti said last month, citing statistics from Net Applications, making it
the most popular single edition on the operating system. IE9's global usage
share on all operating
systems is considerably lower: just 12.6%, or less than half that of the older
IE8. Even with its shrinking share, IE remains the world's most popular
browser: All versions of IE accounted for 52.8% of the browsers run during
February, while Firefox and Chrome claimed 20.9% and 18.9%, respectively. Capriotti
made Microsoft's clearest defense yet for the numbers published by Net
Applications, casting them in contrast to those from Irish metrics company
StatCounter. Net Applications, Capriotti noted Sunday, has long weighted its
results by country -- using the estimates provided by the CIA for each nation's
pool of online users. Moreover, the research firm recently revised its data to
account for Chrome's "pre-rendering" -- eliminating from its count
the sites that Chrome downloads but may never show the user. Both make Net
Applications' figures a more accurate estimate of browser share, Capriotti
said. In comparison, because StatCounter does not weight its data by online
populations, it over-reports the shares of both Firefox and Chrome, and
under-reports IE's share. StatCounter's estimates of IE's usage share are
typically smaller than the estimates from Net Applications: In February, for
example, StatCounter had IE's total share at 35.8%, or about 17 percentage
points lower than Net Applications' estimate of IE's share. As Microsoft has
pointed out, IE9's share is tightly
tied to Windows 7 usage, in large part because the vendor decided not to
support the decade-old Windows XP, which powered 49.4% of the PCs that went
online last month. In that same period, Windows 7 ran 41.5% of all Windows PCs.
Microsoft's focus on newer operating systems will continue with IE10, which
will run only on Windows 7 and the upcoming Windows 8. IE10 will not support the
slowly declining Vista. There is a bright spot for IE overall all,
however. In the past 90 days, IE's share has grown slightly, increasing by
two-tenths of a percentage point. Chrome's share, meanwhile, dropped by about the same
amount over the past two
months.
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