News > Digital
SaveE-mailPrintMost PopularRSSReprints

Yahoo! Turns to Google for Help

Yahoo! bets search ad deal won't undermine its market position

June 16, 2008

- Brian Morrissey


NEW YORK Yahoo! announced last week that it had struck a search advertising deal with rival Google, betting it can increase revenue through the arrangement and still pursue its strategy of marrying search and display advertising.

Yahoo! executives have said they believe the search and display ad markets will converge in the near future. This tenet led the company to rebuff a lucrative offer from Microsoft to buy its search business. Instead, the Google deal, which covers the U.S. and Canada, will generate $250 million to $450 million in additional cash flow, Yahoo! said.

The Google deal outsources part of Yahoo!'s search advertising business. Yahoo! executives did not provide estimates of how many of its search results would carry Google ads rather than its own. Yahoo! president Sue Decker said Google ads would mostly appear for "tail" results, for which Google generates more revenue because of its larger advertiser base.

Decker said this is consistent with Yahoo!'s strategy of developing an open platform for the buying and selling of online advertising. For instance, it has deals with hundreds of newspapers, allowing them to extend ad campaigns onto Yahoo! pages.

The danger for Yahoo! lies in attempting to have it both ways, said Bryan Wiener, CEO of 360i, a New York digital agency. Google's share of searches is already 62 percent, according to comScore, but Wiener said, among 360i's large-company client base, its share of search advertising dollars is much greater than that. Yahoo! draws about 17 percent of searches. If it falls much below 15 percent, it will no longer be efficient for advertisers to participate in it, effectively giving Google a near-monopoly in the vital search ad market.

"This partial outsourcing is going to be greeted by marketers as a confusing message about whether they're in this for the long term," Wiener said. "It hurts the perception of them being an integrated search and display platform."


Yahoo! Turns to Google for Help

Yahoo! bets search ad deal won't undermine its market position

June 16, 2008

- Brian Morrissey


NEW YORK Yahoo! announced last week that it had struck a search advertising deal with rival Google, betting it can increase revenue through the arrangement and still pursue its strategy of marrying search and display advertising.

Yahoo! executives have said they believe the search and display ad markets will converge in the near future. This tenet led the company to rebuff a lucrative offer from Microsoft to buy its search business. Instead, the Google deal, which covers the U.S. and Canada, will generate $250 million to $450 million in additional cash flow, Yahoo! said.

The Google deal outsources part of Yahoo!'s search advertising business. Yahoo! executives did not provide estimates of how many of its search results would carry Google ads rather than its own. Yahoo! president Sue Decker said Google ads would mostly appear for "tail" results, for which Google generates more revenue because of its larger advertiser base.

Decker said this is consistent with Yahoo!'s strategy of developing an open platform for the buying and selling of online advertising. For instance, it has deals with hundreds of newspapers, allowing them to extend ad campaigns onto Yahoo! pages.

The danger for Yahoo! lies in attempting to have it both ways, said Bryan Wiener, CEO of 360i, a New York digital agency. Google's share of searches is already 62 percent, according to comScore, but Wiener said, among 360i's large-company client base, its share of search advertising dollars is much greater than that. Yahoo! draws about 17 percent of searches. If it falls much below 15 percent, it will no longer be efficient for advertisers to participate in it, effectively giving Google a near-monopoly in the vital search ad market.

"This partial outsourcing is going to be greeted by marketers as a confusing message about whether they're in this for the long term," Wiener said. "It hurts the perception of them being an integrated search and display platform."
Post a Comment
Asterisk (*) is a required field.
* Author:
* Comment:
 
The opinions expressed in comments are those of the individual poster. They do not necessarily reflect the views of Adweek or Nielsen Business Media. Attacks of a personal nature and comments that are otherwise inappropriate may be removed.

Other Digital News

target

Target Tries 'Snackable' Videos

November 05, 2009

Target is hoping to make the holiday season merrier and more lucrative by integrating a series of brief Web videos into its online shopping experience. Read Full Article



Our ProductsOur Products

ADWEEK DIGITAL DAILY

A morning briefing of most important interactive news stories.

SUBSCRIBE

Stay connected to what's happening in the advertising industry with delivery of the print edition and complete online access.

More VideosVideo




ADWEEK POLL



Adweek Advertising Home | Advertising Industry News | Creative TV Advertising | Advertising Industry Community | Video Advertising | Advertising Data Center | Advertising Special Reports | Advertising Careers | Advertising Products | Advertising About Us | Advertising Business Statements | Advertising Contact Us | Advertising Opportunities | Ad Licensing | Advertiser FAQ | Advertising Magazine Subscriptions | Advertising News RSS | Online Ad Site Map | Mobile

© 2009 Nielsen Business Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms of Use  |   Privacy Policy