| Microsoft
Going After Google
By Jim Hedger, StepForth
News Editor
Gates is
worried about Google and has been for a while. For years, observers
have watched Microsoft, imagining the frantic pacing behind closed
office doors in the executive suites, waiting for something major
to happen. There have been articles about the rearrangement of furniture
around the board table and the flinging of furniture across Steve
Ballmer’s office but, for the most part, very little of substance
has been written about Microsoft’s plans to deal with Google.
That’s because, until recently, the moves Microsoft has made
have appeared to be either cosmetic and internal, or clumsily executed
and easily thwarted. This week, work that’s been happening
in the background is showing fruit.
For Microsoft, the month of May
has come in like a triumphant lion. When you are used to being the
king of the pride, nothing says success like taking big chunks of
business from the competition and over the past few days, Microsoft
has scored big gains in its fight against Google. These gains, coupled
with today’s rumours of a Microsoft/Yahoo partnership, make
the Wizards of Redmond suddenly dangerous, opening two new phrases
in the ongoing search
engine wars.
Microsoft’s resurgence actually
began last month with the hiring of former Ask Jeeves CEO, Steve
Berkowitz as SR. VP of MSN’s online business group. A Microsoft
press statement said Berkowitz will be, “...responsible for
running the Online Business group, which includes include MSN.com,
MSNTV and MSN Internet Access programming, advertising sales, business
development, and marketing for Live Platforms, MSN and Windows Live.”
The recruitment of Berkowitz gives
Microsoft an important voice with an outside view whose credibility
as a search business leader has been established several times over.
His hiring also indicates Microsoft is starting to look outside
of its own box for leadership as it moves forward into an era that
can only be described as cooperative competition, a historically
difficult phrase to utter on the Microsoft campus.
Microsoft has been in talks with other Internet technology firms
such as Yahoo,
eBay and Amazon for months now as Google’s stable
of services and products continues to grow and present threats to
firms that would otherwise be its search partners. Ever since its
talks with AOL were short-circuited at the last moment by Google
in January 2006, Microsoft has been looking for a strong content-distribution
partner.
Earlier this week, Microsoft’s new search tool, WindowsLive
(http://www.live.com/) became the engine powering Amazon.com’s
search engine A9.com (http://a9.com/-/home.jsp?nc=1) and navigation/data
aggregation service Alexa.com (http://www.alexa.com/). Amazon had
used Google to provide search results for their users in a deal
dating back to 2003, making the partnership one of the larger distributors
of AdWords advertising. That deal expired this month, allowing Amazon
to make the switch.
Google was the previous search engine partner of choice for Amazon
for a number of reasons. In 2003, Google was the undisputed leader
of search tools, providing approximately 75% of Internet search
results across several platforms, including AOL and current rival
Yahoo. It also provided paid-advertising services across Amazon
search properties, an arrangement that should have been as lucrative
for Amazon as it would have been for Google.
In previous years, working with the then upstart Google was not
only a measure of coolness; it had the makings of a secure partnership
with a growing company that prided itself on avoiding evil doings.
The tenor of relationships between
Amazon and Google began to change late in 2005 when Google introduced
its mysterious Google Base listings system and the development of
secure online payment system. Though it likely loses a bit in revenues
by dropping Google, Amazon is also moving to protect itself from
Google’s apparent encroachment into the business of online
sales.
A similar chill is developing among many of the largest players
in the Internet services sector. Late last month, the Wall Street
Journal reported auction giant eBay was in talks with Microsoft
and Yahoo, mapping out a cooperative strategy to compete with Google.
Other tech firms are also rumoured to be speaking informally with
each other, all with an eye on the suddenly disruptive growth of
Google.
The most interesting rumour stemming
from these meetings speaks of a partnership or merger between Microsoft
and Yahoo. According to a story, “A Microsoft, Yahoo Tie-Up?”
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114662449016042303.html? mod=home_whats_news_us)
appearing in today’s Wall Street Journal, Microsoft and Yahoo
executives have been involved in talks ranging from greater collaboration
to out-right acquisition. While the prospects of Microsoft acquiring
controlling interest in Yahoo are slim, increased cooperation between
the two is very likely.
For Microsoft,
Yahoo has a good pay-per-click advertising system in Yahoo Search
Marketing (YSM). It also has the most trafficked set of web properties
in the United States with hundreds of millions of loyal users. Its
ad distribution network is scheduled for system-wide improvements
in the coming weeks. Yahoo also holds thousands of older patents
purchased during its acquisitions of AltaVista, Overture, AlltheWeb,
and dozens of other search related firms.
For Yahoo, Microsoft’s ability
to control defaults on Windows users’ desktops, combined with
the distribution of subtle branded inclusions in subsequent Windows
operating systems, gives Microsoft an advantage Google is struggling
to adapt to. If Microsoft wants to default users to WindowsLive
before offering a selection of other search engine options, it can.
Google and Firefox
have a similar arrangement.
Both Yahoo and Microsoft want to present themselves as credible
alternatives to Google’s AdWords
programs and each provides the other with the tools necessary to
build one. For Yahoo, a deal with Microsoft represents the widest
possible distribution network for YSM advertising.
For advertisers and search marketers, a deal between Microsoft and
Yahoo could bring much needed competition and growth to the search
marketing industry. It could also benefit search engine users by
introducing a healthier competitor in the organic or natural search
listings.
The coming months are going to be very interesting as discussions
between many of the largest players on the Internet continue. The
Amazon announcement and Yahoo
speculation follow last week’s revelation that Microsoft is
going to spend $2Billion more than it had previously projected with
the bulk of those monies directed towards Internet services.
In a defining series of internal
memos on the nature of Internet Services, Microsoft chairman Bill
Gates, and Chief Technical Officer Ray Ozzie, stressed the urgency
of competition with Google to Microsoft’s staff.
“... We must reflect upon what’s going on around us,
and reflect upon our strengths, weaknesses and industry leadership
responsibilities, and respond. As much as ever, it’s clear
that if we fail to do so, our business as we know it is at risk.
We must respond quickly and decisively.” Ray Ozzie memo, Oct
28/05 (http://www.scripting.com/disruption/ozzie/TheInternetServicesDisruptio.htm)
to:
Executive Staff and direct reports
“The next sea change is upon
us. We must recognize this change as an opportunity
to take our offerings to the next level, compete in a manner commensurate
with our industry responsibilities, and utilize our assets and our
broad reach to reshape our business for the benefit of the users
of our products, our customers, our partners and ourselves.”
Gates Oct. 30/05 email memo (http://www.scripting.com/disruption/mail.html)
to: Executive Staff and Direct Reports; Distinguished Engineers
The world of search is never still but the next few months are shaping
up to be among the most interesting and defining times for business
and advertising online. Microsoft is finally making its moves and
in typical style, they are big, bold and broad. It has never faced
a competitor as skilled or as universally loved as Google but the
process of going after Google has clearly begun.
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