Archive for the ‘Yahoo! Google & Microsoft’ Category

Steve Balmer’s (Microsoft CEO) Annual Presentation to Wall Street Analysts

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

Link to the presentation 

One thing that stuck out like a sore thumb from his presentation was his attitude to the internet. Not once did he mention how Microsoft was going to make peoples lives easier or make the internet a better place. This is in stark contrast to the values and principles that got Microsoft to the position they are in today. For Microsoft to become a competitor to Google, with regards to the revenue they generate from the internet they need to look back at their history and adopt the principles they had towards personal computing and apply them to the internet i.e. to make the web a better place by making peoples lives more productive and to enhance their internet experience. Currently their attitude is all about profit and about maximising the revenue from existing internet visitors and internet technology. This is opposed to taking the lead and developing the internet for the benefit of mankind. If Microsoft doesn’t adopt this attitude they will always be playing second fiddle to Google, always.  Steve Balmer was saying how search is ripe for development, how the basic model hasn’t changed from day one i.e. You get an ad at the top, search results to the left maybe ads to the right and ads at the bottom. OK he may be right but I don’t see Microsoft trying to develop this model and as far as it goes, search is about finding what you want not entertainment, maybe he’s right but we’ll never know until Microsoft start implementing some ”developments” to their search engine. Steve Balmer stated that Microsoft spending 5% of their revenues on Search. That’s massive money but he stated it’s a good risk return gamble. Probably is but considering the cash that’s being spent they still look way behind Google, both in search results (although they are improving massively) and in online advertising. 

Steve Balmer also stated that they won’t be successful if they do what Google does. OK, Microsoft wants to take the lead. Fine, they don’t have to do what Google does but they do have to have the same principles as Google if they want to be successful. Google’s principles is basically to encourage the development of the internet, reward people for making good content and reward people for using their search engine by giving them relevant results, basically making the Internet better place for all of it’s stakeholders. Whereas Google is building the highways and helping people to build towns and cities along their highway, Microsoft is making money from the people that travel on the road. They are making money off the traffic that Google is creating. Which one do you think is the leader, the pioneer, the inspiration? Steve Balmer stated that Microsoft is ONLY interested in showing it’s advertising on large websites. Why? So they can control the message and the context that the ads are shown in. This could be one of those cases where the 20% of the largest sites only have 20% of the traffic. If this is the case then this strategy is a loser. Something else Steve Balmer said rang alarm bells “Google doesn’t have a strong presence in display space” I must have misunderstood this as I can’t believe Microsoft has anywhere near the ad display space as Google. I stand to be corrected though. Another point that was made is that Google is overrated ergo online advertising is over rated. Brand advertising (I assume he meant offline) is what creates peoples interest in a product or service, people then search Google for these brands and Google gets the credit for converting these searchers into buyers, as if Google did all the work and it’s a miracle worker. This may be true, at the moment at least, but it is not Google’s fault that this is the way it works. At the end of the day Google provides the platform, it’s up to it’s customers to use it in anyway they see fit. I believe when people truly start to appreciate the power of the principles used by Google this will change, and change beyond all recognition. But Google does not have a patent on good fundamental principles. Steve Balmer was optimistic about MSN, stating that traffic was up 40%. Is it possible that the reason for this is that MSN is the default opening page on internet explorer on new computers? And the fact that the internet is gaining new users who are perhaps unaware that they can change this due to their inexperience. Just a thought. 

Steve Balmer stated the lack of revenue from its ad system at the moment was a lack of conversion and a lack of relevancy. Microsoft want to get more revenue from advertisers, to get more revenue from advertisers Microsoft needs more people using their search engine or visiting their online content and providing more relevant ads. Lack of relevancy is down to lack of advertisers. Why does Microsoft have fewer advertisers than Google? A number of reasons, possibly the biggest, is a lack of exposure for their ads, the second, lack of conversion due to ads being shown on pages which are not as relevant as Google ads, the third is possibly that Microsoft’s ad system is harder to use or lacks the functionality of Google ad words. Microsoft’s search revenue is going to increase in direct proportion to the increase in search volume. Nothing else. If Microsoft is looking for a big breakthrough in ad revenue they need to massively increase the ad exposure that their current advertisers get and I don’t see search volume massively increasing, it’s going to have to come from somewhere else. The answer to this one is simple. The other way Microsoft can increase their ad revenue is by having more advertisers. Increasing the number of advertisers will have an exponential effect on the online ad revenues. Advertisers will get more bang for their buck in 2 ways. The first is higher conversion rate on clicks due ads being more relevant to searches and second an increased number of advertisers in itself will bring more revenue. How does Microsoft encourage more advertisers? Microsoft has to increase advertisers ROI on their ad spend and to do this advertisers need highly relevant potential clients clicking on their ads. This is a catch22 situation for Microsoft (at least it should be looked upon as one), they want to increase revenue by showing more ads but they also want their advertisers to have the maximum ROI (at least they should). The advertisers should win on this one. Microsoft may have to show FEWER ads to increase the ad relevancy to the search term. Microsoft’s control of what ads are shown where could be limited and at least less advanced than Google’s control of their ads, this may make the relevancy situation difficult to resolve for Microsoft, especially if the search terms do not have much competition between advertisers. 

In a nutshell, lack of advertisers is a major problem for Microsoft. If they can dramatically increase the number of advertisers they have this will sort out a lot of their current problems on their own. A larger number of advertisers will increase the relevancy of the ads shown, it will increase the ROI for advertisers, and it will increase Microsoft’s revenue. Increased ROI for investors and increased relevancy of ads will encourage more advertisers and snowball from there. Microsoft’s problem is that advertisers don’t want to fund Microsoft’s development period while they attract more advertisers. Microsoft has to be ruthless with what ads are shown where to give its ad system credibility. Really this is just the beginning of a long road for Microsoft, even to get to the same level as Google now. The real challenge starts when Microsoft has to start filtering the ads that are shown for particular terms, this is where Google’s technology really comes into play.  

 

Search is fantastic but people need ideas for what to search for

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

And where do these ideas come from. What stimulates peoples interest in a subject or person enough for them to search for more information? Like it or not, the mass media, whether it is advertising or the news or entertainment products or sport, all the ideas come from mainstream TV, the Radio, Magazines and Newspapaers and not online. The mass media, newspapers, tv and magazines and radio are what brings us all together. Without the mass media search would die. If people dont get ideas, they wont search. Simple as that.

Oh my God Google is not the answer to everything! Well, maybe they are but they need to evolve search or maybe start Google World, a search engine which not only gives you results directly to what your looking for but also gives results to subjects which might be relevant to what your searching for, even though some or none of these results contains the terms you were originally searching for. I know this is something Google is working on but it may be some time before it becomes a reality.

For now at least, the mass media is king, newspapers, tv, radio and magazines not the internet and not Google, not for now anyway.

Anti Trust – Yahoo! using Google Adwords

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

This one has got me completely stumped. I honestly don’t see the problem. It’s as simple as this, Google Adwords is by far the best advertising programme out there and it has a monopoly not because the company is so big but because the programme is the best and is run with solid fundamentals that encourage the development of the internet.

Lets take a look at Amazon’s affiliate programme for example. Affiliates only get paid when people buy things from Amazon not when affiliates refer people to Amazon’s website. This is fundamentally wrong. It is saying to affiliates that you have to bring people to our site and also get them to buy something. In other words it is giving the affiliates responsibilty of converting the visitors into buyers on a website they have no control over. It is not up to the affiliate to convert visitors into buyers, that is 100% the job off the shop owner, in this case Amazon.

Google know this which is why websites get paid for creating traffic for other sites and not for converting visitors into sales. If websites converted enough visitors into buyers then they would start their own online shop and not advertise other companies online shops.

Until a company comes up with an advertising system that uses the same honest and fair fundamentals as Google Adwords then Google Adwords will continue to be the Number 1. Not because Google is the biggest but because Google is the best.

Mircosoft Still Interested in Yahoo!???

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Ill be honest, I dont really understand the renewed interest, unless there is a chance the board will be replaced as Carl Icahn wants. Its on the table that it’s possible that Microsoft will buy only the search part of the Yahoo! business. This suprises me. As I’ve said before, if Microsoft can get their act together with their own search techonology they they wont need to buy Yahoo! search. At a price of 1 billion dollars for Yahoo! search it must be a better use of funds to keep that money and spend it on research instead.

From Yahoo!’s point of view they should really be saying where they are going to take the business in the future, this is the only way that they can reasonably say that Mircosoft’s offer is too low. Too low, why? what are you going to do in the next 5 years to increase the share value above Microsofts current bid. I haven’t heard anything, Yahoo! are not doing themselves any favours keeping quiet about future plans. It could be that the press is biased to the Icahn and Microsoft side of the story? Maybe Yahoo! have got plans but they are not sharing it?

If Im honest I believe Microsoft must want to buy the whole of the Yahoo! business. To me anyway, it just doesnt make sense that Microsoft would buy the Yahoo! search for a billion dollars, it just doesnt look like good value. Much better for Microsoft to buy the whole of the Yahoo! business and take over the millions of Email accounts that Yahoo! has and all the content that Yahoo! has and all those millions of viewing hours that the Yahoo! content has. Its content has many times more viewing hours than their search results. Just ask Google, they get what? 10 times as many searches as Yahoo! yet in total, people spend more hours looking at Yahoo! content than Google. Content is where the money and influence is and at the end of the day, that is what all companies want.

As for Microsoft saying to the BBC that they are no longer interested in Yahoo! because they are losing key staff. This is a blatant attempt by Microsoft to weaken Yahoo!’s position by syaing the company really isnt worth that much. In fact ill go one stage further about Mircosoft’s plans, they only thing they are interested in, is the information and the email accounts of Yahoo! users and the fringe benefits that go with Yahoo! are a bonus. 

Microsoft paying people to use its search engine

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

This really is desperation and shows a total lack of vision. The search results from Live.com are absolutley shocking and until they get this sorted they will always be a bit player in the search engine market.

Carl Icahn – Should he? Could he?

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

“I and many of your shareholders strongly believe that a combination between Yahoo and Microsoft would form a dynamic company and more importantly would be a force strong enough to compete with Google on the internet,” said Mr Icahn.  BBC News

 A force strong enough to compete? What force do you need? The internet is open to everyone and there are no barriers to entry. What force do you need? And to top it all Google supports the growth of Microsoft and Yahoo! because it doesn’t it discriminate against these companies in it’s search results.

 A force strong enough to compete, what is this guy talking about? A case in point, Facebook, a household name and only 2 years old.

 A force strong enough to compete with Google. Carl Icahn hasn’t got the first clue about the internet. Just so you know.

Microsoft, Yahoo! & Google

Monday, May 5th, 2008

What exactly has Microsoft got to gain from purchasing Yahoo! The only thing I can see is econoimies of scale from combining the activities they carry out in parallel at the moment. Games, News, Chat etc etc. But this is not the problem for either Yahoo! or Microsoft. They do chat, games, news etc etc very well.

 The problem they have is sub standard search technology. A meger between Yahoo! and Microsoft is not going to solve their problem. This merger makes very little sense. Sure they will be more efficient but the problem is they don’t generate anywhere near the revenues they want.

 The worry for Yahoo! is that they don’t have a plan. Well, at least that I can see. Has anyone from Yahoo! identified their problems and how their going to solve them? I mean with a Microsoft bidding for them, now is surely the time to tell people what their future plans are and show how a Microsft takeover is such a bad idea. But I haven’t heard anything.

 If anything the ideal partnership would be for Google to take a controlling stake in Yahoo! and let the companies run seperately.  This would be a utopian situation for Google. Their problem is that people only spend a fraction of a time on their site compared with visitors to Yahoo! Google’s problem is they dont want to comprimise the users search experience. Run the two as is and show Google adwords on Yahoo!. Lets be honest here. Google adwords is decades ahead of Yahoo! in paid advertising both in terms of philosophy and execution. This would be a real cost saver for Yahoo! as they would no longer have to spend money on maintaing and developing their paid advetising programme.