By
Stefanie Olsen
Wednesday, June 14 2006 10:29 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39367346,00.htm
LAGUNA BEACH, Calif.--Many industry executives expect sales growth of
online brand advertising to outpace advertising related to Web search in the
coming years, begging the question: How will search giant Google keep pace?
Here at Piper Jaffray's Global Internet Summit, a three-day confab of media
executives and investors, a Google executive was posed a similar question, cast
in the light of less-than-stellar results from the company's display advertising product so far.
"It's (in its) very early days," said Sheryl Sandberg, Google's vice
president of global online advertising sales and operations. "When we think of
display advertising, we think it's a space...that's beginning to grow."
Piper Jaffray analysts expect global search-advertising sales to grow by an
estimated 40 percent this year, to US$13.6 billion. In contrast, global brand ad
sales are expected to be US$11.7 billion, up 25 percent for the year. After 2007,
however, sales growth will begin to favor display ads, such as banners on Web
pages, over search, according to Piper Jaffray analysts and ad executives attending the conference.
That's a dramatic shift for search, given its triple and high double-digit
growth rates since 2002.
After the dot-com bust, targeted search ads revived the languishing online
advertising market because search engines like Google and Yahoo could connect
interested buyers with sellers at a relatively low cost. Google in particular
became an online titan of search-related ads for it's simple, relevant results,
deriving billions in annual revenue at the exclusion of other ad formats like display, or brand ads.
But with the rise of video consumption online, Internet brand advertising in
the form of video will benefit, executives say. For example, TV commercial
advertisers already are formatting 30-second spots for broadcasts online at
sites like NYTimes.com or YouTube.
Another driver of brand advertising online is coming from consumer-package
goods companies, such as Clorox, which are allotting more of their ad budgets
online and away from traditional markets, ad executives say.
Elizabeth Ross, president of Tribal DDB West, a major ad agency, said that
companies like Clorox aren't interested as much in search-related advertising
because they don't want to compete with Wal-Mart Stores, for example, to
advertise a household cleaning product. Rather, they're more interested in
bolstering their brand name in the online forum.
That doesn't bode well for Google, given that search rivals Yahoo and
Microsoft offer advertisers a wide range of display or brand advertising opportunities.
Still, in a measure to diversify its revenue, Google has begun selling
advertiser image ads, which are displayed on its publisher partner sites. And
according to Sandberg, Google recently introduced a "click to play" advertising
service that lets brand advertisers pay fees when visitors click to play a video
ad, which are often construed as brand ads.
Google is also thinking of experimenting with other kinds of display ads, Sandberg said.