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Web Marketing Breaking News
- Google Acquires Sprinks
Posted October 24, 2003
Google has signed Primedia to a
four-year search and contextual advertising agreement,
and has purchased Sprinks, the publishing company's
paid listings unit.
Financial terms were not disclosed,
and Primedia executives declined to comment further.
The deal calls for Google to become
the exclusive provider of contextually targeted and
search advertising across the 450 About.com Guide Sites
and the Web sites for most of Primedia's Consumer Media
and Magazines Group. The group includes many of the
magazine publisher's 250 magazines, which include Motor
Trend, Automobile, New York, Fly Fisherman and Creating
Keepsakes.
Sprinks' key strength is that it
has long been working on the problem of serving relevant
ads on content pages. This is something Google provides
via its AdSense program, and rival Overture, now owned
by Yahoo!, also offers. Contextual advertising has become
hot as search players seek to capitalize onthe popularity
of the medium by expanding inventory off of search pages.
In a statement, Primedia chairman
Dean Nelson said that he did the deal because Google's
base of 150,000 or so advertisers would let the company
"accelerate the benefits of contextual advertising
across our Internet sites and enable us to more effectively
monetize our Web site traffic than we could with Sprinks
alone."
The deal is a win for both Google
and Primedia, according to Matthew Berk, research director
for Jupiter Research, which is owned by this publication's
parent, Jupitermedia. "Primedia gets to unload
the operating costs of the Sprinks division, which is
probably not insignificant. Gogogle clarifies the channel,
gains customers and broader distribution for AdSense.
Primedia takes a less-profitable division and replaces
it with a nice cushy deal from Google." Although
he's not privy to the terms of the deal, Berk guesses
that Google is paying Primedia in addition to sharing
ad revenue across Primedia's network.
Greater distribution for Google is
essential, Berk said, in its war with Overture. "Distribution
was Overture's Achilles heel," he said, and, before
it was acquired by Yahoo!, the biggest line item in
its budget. The economics of Google, he said, demand
an ever-increasing number of opportunities to serve
up keyword campaigns.
What that
means for advertisers is another story, Berk said. Google
will replace Sprinks' method of contextual targeting,
which allowed advertisers to pick from a hierarchical
list of categories, with the keyword method used by
Google and Overture. "Google took one of the variants
out of the model," Berk said. "[Sprinks] advertisers
and publishers now have to change horses."
Google continues to show that they
are a serious player in the pay-per-click arena - this
is proof positive of that.
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