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By ArticleSnatch on April 25, 2008

The biggest acquisition news yesterday wasn’t Microsoft-Yahoo but Arby’s-Wendy’s. In both cases, search marketers are asking, “Where’s the beef?”
Better yet, analysts on the Microsoft conference call should have asked, “Where’s the search?”
Microsoft search queries and page views are up year-over-year. By how much? No Wall St. analysts asked the question.
Microsoft reported $4.4 billion in net income for the quarter.
Microsoft’s online services business increased revenue 40 percent to $843 million, including $143 million from aQuantive, which added 96 new publishers this quarter to the Atlas Publisher Solutions, the ad management platform that competes with Google’s DoubleClick division.
Online advertising for Microsoft grew 39 percent. If aQuantive ad revenue ($47 million) is excluded, Microsoft was up 29 percent. Microsoft’s online audience is still growing. Live IDs increased to 18 percent to 448 million.
Microsoft remains focused on the online advertising market (doubling by 2010 to $80 billion).
Yahoo would accelerate growth but the core strategy won’t change: drive innovation and search, increase value to advertisers and publishers through innovation and scale and grow user engagement across MSN and Windows Live properties.
The weak U.S. dollar may be Microsoft’s best friend. While about half of Google’s revenue comes from the U.S., two-thirds of Microsoft’s revenue is derived from users abroad. In addition, about 15 percent of revenue is in high-growth emerging markets.
Microsoft’s strategy of reinvesting existing business, pursuing organic and acquisition growth opportunities makes the company a formidable competitor with or without Yahoo – except in search.
![[image]](http://mowser.com/img?url=http%3A%2F%2Ffeeds.searchenginewatch.com%2F%7Er%2Fsewblog%2F%7E4%2F277589268)
Posted in SEO | Tagged google, Microsoft, online advertising market, online audience, online services, Search marketers, search queries, United States, USD, yahoo |
By ArticleSnatch on January 3, 2008
In 2007, the Japanese online advertising market was projected to be worth between $3.4 billion (Dentsu) and $4.1 billion (PricewaterhouseCoopers). By 2011, Dentsu estimates that Japan’s online ad market value will be $6.8 billion; PrivewaterhouseCoopers says it will be slightly more at $7 billion. read more More: continued here mobile advertising growing fast in japan
| Tagged Japan, online ad market value, online advertising market, USD |
By ArticleSnatch on November 7, 2007
Online advertising in China is reaching double-digit growth so far in 2007, according to Nielsen’s AdRelevance report. The value of online display advertising in China reached RMB 2.6 billion in Q3, 2007 an increase of 14 percent over Q2. Total online advertising value for the year to date is RMB 6.6 billion. The value of [...]
| Tagged China, CNY, online ads, online advertising, online advertising market, online advertising value, online display ads, online display advertising, online market, Sail Ma, Southeast Asia |
By ArticleSnatch on October 15, 2007
Google’s stock closed last week at $637.39, Wall Street thinks Google’s third quarter earnings announcement may come in 50 cents higher per share than last quarter, the company gets two-thirds of the web searches and 40 percent of the ad revenue. They’re screwed.I don’t remember reading the ‘weakness due to strength’ argument in Suzuki, but [...]
| Tagged ad serving technology, Bloomberg, cents, Eric Schmidt, google, Internet firms, local and mobile search advertising, online advertising market, search world, search-driven destinations, Suzuki, The Washington Post, USD, Web searches, yahoo |
By ArticleSnatch on September 24, 2007
Google’s proposed purchase of DoubleClick earned it an invitation to a Senate subcommittee hearing this week. Microsoft’s work with PR firm Burson-Marsteller could have helped print that invite.Skullduggery in the form of a whispering campaign against Google, carried out by Burson-Marsteller on Microsoft’s, called for media organizations and Internet firms to sign up at www.i-comp.org. [...]
Posted in Internet | Tagged Burson, Burson-Marsteller, Europe, google, Jack Evans, Jonathan Dinkeldein, media organizations, Microsoft, online advertising market, Online Marketplaces, online petition, pro-company online initiatives, Senate subcommittee, transparent and competitive Internet, United Kingdom, Wal-Mart, Wall Street Journal, www.i-comp.org |
By ArticleSnatch on August 11, 2007
New privacy practices announced by Google will get a workout in a test of third-party ad serving technology. Google announced its ad-serving tests will employ cookies with shorter expiration dates, and anonymization of data after 18 months. The company formulated these new policies in response to criticism over search privacy in the US and the [...]
Posted in Internet | Tagged ad server, ad serving technology, Congress, European Union, Federal Trade Commission, google, internet users, online advertising market, search privacy, third-party ad serving technology, United States, US Government |
By ArticleSnatch on July 18, 2007
Sparks fly as Scott Cleland, president of Precursor Group and chairman of anti-net neutrality organization Netcompetition.org, receives the criticism he fully expected in assessing the likelihood of the Google offer for DoubleClick being blocked. Cleland’s assessment of the merger, freely available from his Googleopoly website, contends the Federal Trade Commission likely has enough reasons to [...]
Posted in Internet | Tagged ad-serving services, advertising deal, AT&T, Bloomberg, Broadband Access, Computer and Communications Industry Association, Ed Black, Equifax, Experian, Factset, Federal Reserve System, Federal Trade Commission, financial analytical tools, google, IBM, intermediary online advertising market, Microsoft, Netcompetition.org, New York, online advertising market, Panama, Precursor Group, Scott Cleland, search, search ad system, search advertising, search/ad-serving, U.S. Census Bureau, Worldcom, yahoo |
By ArticleSnatch on May 24, 2007
China’s online advertising market reached approximately $176 million in the first quarter of 2007, according to Analysys International. The firm found that Baidu and Sina were the top Web portals in China, with market shares of 20.6 percent and 18.6 percent, respectively. Online ad spending has continued to increase since 1998 according to a Shanghai [...]
Posted in Internet | Tagged China, Internet market, online ad spending, online advertising market, online display ads, USD, Web portals |
By ArticleSnatch on April 16, 2007
Allowing Google to acquire advertising network operator DoubleClick would create an imbalance in the online ad market, and Microsoft thinks the deal should be quashed by regulators. Google’s $3.1 billion bid for DoubleClick has become a lightning rod for criticism since its announcement on Friday the 13th. Microsoft has no desire to play camp counselor [...]
Posted in Internet | Tagged advertising network operator, advertising-supported model, Allowing Google, Andy Beal, aol, AT&T, Brad Smith, Broadband, Comcast, DoubleClick, Eric Schmidt, Europe, google, Jason Voorhees, Jim Cicconi, Microsoft, online ad market, online advertising, online advertising market, online advertising space, online player, The New York Times, United States, USD, Web Services, yahoo |
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