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January 15, 2004 at 1:14 pm #584347vladcizsolMember
Yahoo, Google primed for search war
By Evan Hansen and Jim Hu
Staff Writer, CNET News.comYahoo on Wednesday said it will drop search partner Google during the first quarter of 2004 in favor of its own technology, opening a new phase in the battle for Web search dominance.
The announcement from Yahoo CEO Terry Semel caps more than a year of speculation over the move, which has been widely expected since Yahoo announced plans to acquire search provider Inktomi for $235 million in December 2002. Inktomi has developed so-called algorithmic search technology similar to Google’s that indexes Web pages and ranks them based on search terms.
“We’ve been hard at work with the assets that we’ve acquired to develop our (own) algorithmic search engine,” Yahoo Chief Financial Officer Susan Decker said in a phone interview. “We’ll be swapping that out in Q1.”
Although expected, the announcement highlights the changing market for Web-based search, which has been transformed in the past two years thanks to fast-growing and profitable advertising programs.
Google currently processes approximately 80 percent of all search requests on the Web through distribution deals with Yahoo, Time Warner’s America Online and Ask Jeeves, according to market share data compiled by research firm Comscore Media Metrix. When Yahoo ends its deal with Google, that share is expected to drop to about 54 percent. Yahoo’s reach, meanwhile, could jump to 42 percent, based on its own search traffic and a deal that provides Inktomi results to Microsoft’s MSN Web portal.
Analysts said the shift means that, overnight, Web search will change from a near monopoly situation to a two-horse race.
“Competition-wise, this sets Yahoo up to take Google on,” said Search Engine Watch Editor Danny Sullivan. “The minute Yahoo bought Inktomi, the idea they were partners and friends fell by the wayside. But Yahoo has not given consumers a strong reason to think of Yahoo as different from Google. They need Inktomi out there to get their own voice and differentiate themselves.”
The change will likely have only a small impact on Google’s and Yahoo’s businesses, at least in the short term, Sullivan said. Google earned just $7.1 million in fees from Yahoo in 2001 for providing its algorithmic search results, he said.
The real money in search comes from advertising revenues. Keyword searches made up 31 percent of the $1.66 billion in U.S. online ad sales for the second quarter of 2003, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB), an industry trade group.
Since November 2001, Yahoo has run advertising search links on its site from Overture Services–which it acquired last year for $1.6 billion–meaning Google won’t see any loss in its advertising reach when the deal unravels.
“This will mean virtually nothing to Google” from a business perspective, Sullivan said. “I don’t know how much money they were making, but I’d be surprised if it was in the tens of millions. The real money in search is in ads, but Yahoo never carried Google’s ads…What you really want to understand is the reach of their ad networks. That’s not changing.”
Sullivan said things will get even more interesting when Microsoft gets its Web search act together, something he said he expects by the end of the year.
Semel on Wednesday said that Yahoo has expanded its deal to offer Overture’s paid search results to MSN’s sites throughout Europe and Asia, adding to an existing deal throughout the United States and the United Kingdom.
But the boost from the MSN deal could be short-lived, Sullivan said.
“By the end of 2004, MSN will get their act together,” he said. “Then the worry for Yahoo is that MSN will prove to be a temporary boost for them.”
January 15, 2004 at 9:04 pm #643622AnonymousInactivethis is good news in my books
January 15, 2004 at 11:54 pm #643623AnonymousInactiveI think that they’ve all ready randomly routed some ip addresses to the new search results. I know everyone thinks I’m on crack, but I get inktomi results on yahoo. They’re probably doing this for testing purposes before switching over.
Antoine
January 16, 2004 at 12:42 pm #643633AnonymousInactiveI didn’t understood: will it be completely Ink database + search technology results at Yahoo, or only search technology + Yahoo’s own database?
If it will be Ink database, how about sites that are in Yahoo directory but aren’t in Ink database (like mine)? :confused:January 16, 2004 at 12:45 pm #643635vladcizsolMemberNatalia I belive it will be Yahoo Directory + Inktomi most likely with a big boost to those in both. This is pure speculation, but it would make the most sense.
January 16, 2004 at 2:03 pm #643636AnonymousInactiveThanks, Professor!
It makes sense.
Ink completely dropped my site about 3 months ago and i lost all MSN traffic.
Hope things will improve when MSN will launch it’s own search (if only this will happen in this life ). -
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