By
Stefanie Olsen
Wednesday, March 16 2005 02:31 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/business/0,39044229,39221800,00.htm
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is expected to show off a new
paid-search service on Wednesday that will eventually go toe-to-toe
with rival Google and supplant partner Yahoo's advertising.
As previously reported,
Microsoft's Internet group is developing a pay-per-click ad-bidding
system that pairs search results with sponsored text messages from
advertisers. Yahoo's Overture Services currently supplies MSN with
sponsored search links, which complement MSN-sold "featured sites."
But the new MSN
service, called adCenter and set to roll out in Singapore and France in
the coming months, will bump Overture ads in the long run and let MSN
own a major source of its advertising revenue. (Microsoft splits fees
collected from marketers with Overture.)
Adam Sohn, MSN spokesman, said Microsoft does not have a specific date
for a U.S. launch, but it envisions operating the ad network globally.
"Call this the third leg of the search stool," said Sohn. "First,
we introduced algorithmic search, then desktop (search), which is still
in beta, and now the advertising platform."
With the product, Microsoft will move into the honey den of a
multibillion-dollar ad business dominated by Google and Yahoo.
Search-engine marketing is expected to be worth as much as $5 billion
this year, and nearly $9 billion annually within four years, according
to Jupiter Research. Microsoft's piece of the pie is smaller than the
shares enjoyed by market leaders Yahoo and Google, but the software
giant is hungry for more.
Google fields 35.1 percent of the searches online, followed by
Yahoo at 31.8 percent and MSN at 16 percent, according to ComScore
qSearch. If the number of searches translates to the percentage of the
ad market, MSN generates roughly $1.6 billion annually from search,
minus the portion shared with Overture.
MSN's product is far from fully baked, according to Sohn, but
it could eventually crowd rivals, search engine watchers say. Given
that there is a finite number of searches conducted on the Internet,
and hence a limited number of opportunities to display search-related
ads, MSN will grab ad dollars away from Yahoo and Google, they say.
According to data from ComScore qSearch, there were roughly 4.9 billion
search queries in the United States during the month of January.
"The big pie of searches out there isn't getting any bigger"
because of MSN's ad platform, said industry expert Danny Sullivan. "All
that's happening is that the larger slice Yahoo had is now smaller, because
some has to go to MSN."
A Yahoo spokeswoman said that though the company's Overture Services
relationship with MSN is set to expire at the end of June 2006, Yahoo
had financially accounted for potential account shifts, and MSN's
licensing deal was "gravy."
Other analysts say the
search pie could, in fact, get bigger. They say MSN, Yahoo and others
are working hard to expand the universe of online searches by
integrating advanced search everywhere they can--desktops, toolbars and
wireless phones, for example.
"The way people are expanding inventory is basically by
integrating search wherever possible," said ComScore analyst James
Lamberti.
For the last two years, Microsoft has been bullish on plans to
build a search network to best Google's. Already this year, the company
replaced Yahoo's Inktomi search technology with its own homegrown
software. But Microsoft's designs for an ad system based on bids for
particular keywords had been played down in the last year while the
company perfected its search technology.
The development of such a system also suffered a setback in
early 2004, when Paul Ryan left. Ryan, a key hire from Overture, was in
charge of building the monetary engine of MSN's emerging search engine.
Key to MSN's strategy is to lure Web searchers away from
rivals, and then draw in advertisers. MSN's adCenter, for example, will
offer advertisers detailed information on Web surfers' responses to
certain keywords, as well as demographic and psychographic profile data
(in aggregate) on potential customers.
The company will also build in tools to give advertisers greater access to reporting data.
Finally, MSN envisions adding functionality that will let
advertisers buy banners and other branding-styled ads, alongside
keyword paid search. Sohn said MSN is interested in building in
contextual advertising opportunities and ad-syndication services, too.
Ballmer and MSN Chief Yusef Mehdi will outline
new advertising opportunities at the company's annual advertising
summit in Seattle, Microsoft's headquarters.
The two executives will also talk about a new entertainment
advertising division that will focus on developing a range of fresh
brand advertising opportunities.
"We're investing deeply in brand advertising and direct
marketing," said Sohn, who declined to disclose the amount of the
investment.