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MSN vs Google / Yahoo Ads
Web Design & Technology News, March 17, 2005

Google Buys Urchin Web Analytics
Update: MSN vs Google/Yahoo Ads
MSN vs Google/Yahoo Ads
Akamai Acquires Speedera
Yahoo 360 Social Networking
MSIE Yielding to Web Standards?
Broswer Cookies and Security
Can Firefox outfox IE?
Lycos Switches to Ask Jeeves
Mozilla Web App Suite Ends at v1.7

Yahoo Web Ads for Small Publishers
Diverging Paths for Web Forms
Google Personalizes Web News
Google's Clustered Web Results
Yahoo's SB Resource Center
Google Launches Desktop Search
Netscape Web Browser 8 Beta
10 Years of Yahoo Web Search
Yahoo Opens Search Tools

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March 17, 2005

Microsoft (MSFT) on Wednesday plans to introduce a pilot program to sell sponsored search listings, according to sources familiar with the matter.
By Stefanie Olsen

The software company has long sold "featured" listings in its search results, but has defaulted to partners including Yahoo-owned Overture Services to supply the lion's share of its search-related ads. Late Wednesday, the company is expected to unveil details of a plan to sell its own keyword-search ads, in a first step to owning a commercial search network to rival those of Google and Yahoo.

However, MSFT does not plan to immediately discontinue its partnership with Overture, according to a source familiar with the plan. For the last several years, Overture has supplied the sponsored search listings adjacent to and above MSN search results, a partnership that has helped buoy profits of the Internet property. The deal is slated to end in June 2006.

For the last two years, MSFT has been bullish on plans to build a search network to best Google's. Already this year, the company replaced Yahoo's Inktomi search technology with its own homegrown software. But MSFT's designs for a keyword-bidding system--the money engine of search--have been played down in the last year while the company perfected its search technology.

Its development also suffered a setback in early 2004, when Paul Ryan, a key hire from Overture, left. Ryan was in charge of building the monetary engine of MSN's emerging search engine.

Still, sales from search-engine marketing have driven widespread development and experimentation in the industry. Paid search is expected to be worth between $4 billion and $5 billion this year. And MSFT has said it wants to own its revenue in this arena, instead of share it with partners. The company on Tuesday declined to comment on its plans.

But Internet analysts viewed the move as largely positive.

"In larger terms, MSFT developing into the third major paid online search advertising platform is likely to support market growth as Global 2000 corporate clients find additional keyword inventory available," Internet analyst David Garrity, of Carris and Company, wrote in a research note.

"I think it's better to settle these differences as a business matter and not in the courts," he said. "A lot of damage could have been done to the business in the meantime."

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