MSN takes on Google AdWords

By Elinor Mills, CNET News.com
Tuesday, September 27, 2005 08:50 AM

In a move that counters Google's successful advertising programs, Microsoft's MSN unit on Monday launched its own paid-search advertising program in France and said it plans to begin testing the system in the United States next month.

MSN AdCenter, which debuted in Singapore at the end of last month, allows advertisers to launch highly targeted online keyword search-based campaigns, with the ability to include or exclude target customers based on geographic location, gender and age and to run ads only during certain times and days.

The system competes with Google's AdWords program and will eventually replace a keyword-based advertising program MSN contracts out to Yahoo. It has a simple user interface and is notable for its use of customer profiling, taking advantage of the data MSN gathers from its more than 9 million subscribers.

"With the competing products you buy a word. On ours you go into detailed level and see who is searching for words," said Eric Hadley, senior director of advertising and marketing for MSN. "You can plan an (ad) buy based on the people and say, 'I'm willing to pay this much for this demographic, and I don't want these people in the mix.'"

MSN AdCenter provides expected profiles of customers who are most likely to search for specific keywords and offers cost estimates for budgeting purposes as well as analytic data that show how the campaign performed, including click-through rates. MSN boasts more than 420 million unique visitors each month.

MSN plans to eventually expand its service to allow advertisers to launch targeted display ads on Web sites, which would compete with Google AdSense, Hadley said.

Jennifer Stephens, a spokeswoman for Yahoo, which acquired keyword-based advertising pioneer Overture Services, said Yahoo's contract with MSN expires in June 2006, but declined to comment on the MSN relationship beyond that.

Google declined to comment for this article. (Google representatives have instituted a policy of not talking with CNET News.com reporters until July 2006 in response to privacy issues raised by a previous story.)

An executive at Ask Jeeves, which was recently acquired by InterActiveCorp (IAC) and launched its own keyword-based ad program about two months ago, said the company wasn't worried about competition from MSN, partly because advertisers can reach different customers on the various portals and search Web sites.

"Based on the last round of Nielsen data, it looks like we only have 13 percent audience duplication on average between us and the other sites," said Paul Gardi, executive vice president and general manager of IAC Advertising Solutions. "Microsoft is talking about demographic profiling, which is interesting, but from our perspective we are not doing it right now because we have issues with privacy."

MSN's Hadley said the AdCenter service does not provide advertisers with any data that can be traced back to a specific person.

"We get information from registered users, behaviors that aren't personally identifiable. Also, (we are) mapping with third-party databases, like household income combined with reverse IP (Internet Protocol) lookup to see what area the user comes from," by ZIP code, he said. "We probably have higher privacy standards for ourselves than the industry does."

Two search engine industry experts said MSN's large user base and early reviews are indications that AdCenter will do well.

"I think MSN has some features advertisers will gobble up, but it's too early to say whether it will be a superior experience," Danny Sullivan, editor of Search Engine Watch, wrote in an e-mail response to questions. "They have a sizable amount of traffic. Advertisers will want to reach that audience, and buying through MSN is going to be the only way to do that."

At least one consumer has posted a favorable review on MSN AdCenter, noted Barry Schwartz, editor of Search Engine Roundtable.

"But only time will tell," Schwartz wrote in an e-mail. "I am sure they will start off slow and buggy. But they should be able to catch up to the competition soon. Plus, they have the tools to be more successful in the near future."

The news is only the latest in the software giant's plans to rely more on advertising. Microsoft also plans to offer more advertising-related software, particularly now that MSN is being folded into the platform development group, Hadley said. For example, the company already sells a version of Microsoft Money that has advertisements in it, he said.

Hadley said he also envisioned a marriage between advertising and games. For example, Xbox Live customers could upgrade to a faster virtual car by agreeing to put a company's logo on the car in the online races, he said.


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