"The Case for Overture to Enter the Mass Contextual Advertising Market"
Contextual Advertising is, by definition, text-based advertising. As opposed to
search engine results which show up when a user types in a specific request, contextual
ads appear alongside text on all websites that opt to show them.
The market leader in contextual advertising is Google. Through its AdWords
program, advertisers can choose to syndicate their ads on relevant websites.
On the other side of the equation, website owners can join Googles AdSense
program to serve these ads.
Google is not the only company that allows website owners to serve contextual
ads. There are a host of others such as Searchfeed.com and Revenue Pilot that
also do this. The problem with using these other firms is that the price-per-click
you receive will most likely be less than the price that Google pays you. This
is because advertisers generally bid/pay on an auction basis. Since Google has
so many bidders, the price that the advertiser pays is greater than they pay
on lesser search engines (classic supply/demand economics).
There is one search engine, Overture, which also serves large volumes of advertisers,
and as such, has keyword bid prices that are as high as, and often higher than
Googles. While Overture does offer contextual advertising, it has strict
limitations which prevent the vast majority of websites from enrolling. Specifically,
Overture limits its contextual advertising program to websites generating more
than 1 million web searches a month.
Overture clearly is missing out on a huge revenue source by limiting program
participants. The rational behind its selectivity is most likely the fact that
its contextual advertising program relies heavily on Overture's editorial team
to avoid poor matches that a technology-dependant approach inevitably produces.
As an example, according to statements released at the time of the programs
launch by Bill Demas, Overture's Senior Vice President, without editorial intervention
a story about a person stabbed to death could easily carry knife advertisements.
While Overture is missing out on significant revenues, web publishers are also
missing out by Overtures non-participation. This is because, if more web
publishers were able to choose between AdSense and Overtures programs,
Google would be forced to become more aggressive with the percentage split that
it gives AdSense publishers. While it has been reported that big Google partners
such as AOL.com receive 80% of the revenue per click generated by Google ads,
AdSense publishers report figures in the 10% to 50% range.
So, web publishers should really begin pushing Overture to open up its contextual
advertising program as web publishers, and potentially Overture/Yahoo!s
shareholders, could reap significant financial benefits.
About the Author:
As President of Growthink, Dave Lavinsky has helped the company become one of
the premier business plan development firms. Growthink clients have collectively
raised over $750 million in financing, launched numerous new product and service
lines and gained competitive advantage and market share. For more information
please visit http://www.growthink.com |