Google Expands Newspaper Pilot Program

Summary

As expected, Google has expanded its newspaper ad pilot program and has made it easier and more visible to AdWords advertisers. The program has shown success, as we noted back in December, and represents one of the many flanks in Google’s march toward covering all media and all formats. The latter charge was emboldened by its DoubleClick acquisition (still facing congressional antitrust scrutiny), and various media continue to be brought into the fold through partnerships such as ClearChannel (radio). The newspaper effort specifically launched to resell print ads across 50 U.S. papers and has now been extended to 250. We expect more to follow.

Analysis

Newspapers with falling ad revenues will likely accept Google’s new source of ad dollars whole-heartedly, while some advertisers will appreciate the invitation to advertise in a print medium, previously out of reach. The effort specifically chops up full-page ads into smaller ads that are more affordable for a subset of businesses that might have had a long-standing desire to advertise in print but couldn’t afford it.

Newspapers, meanwhile, have always had the capability to do this, but from a sales channel perspective, it isn’t as attractive (opportunity cost) to go after a fragmented base of smaller businesses interested in smaller ad spends. Sales reps instead devote their attention to the car dealers, furniture showrooms and big-box retailers of the world.

Google’s self-provisioning ad campaign setup, on the other hand, makes this possible and essentially adds a sales channel for newspapers, albeit inferior to their own physical sales asset (an important and core strength, like Yellow Pages). Regardless, it opens up a new addressable market segment to newspapers at a time when they need it most.

Indeed, headlines of newspaper publishers’ woes continue unabated. The latest is Tribune Co.’s statements this week that the Los Angeles Times experienced one of its “worst quarters ever” in ad revenues and cash flow.

New Advertisers: For Better or Worse

The chopped-up ad revenues, however, could present a slight downside for newspapers that tie up with Google’s effort. Creating these affordable chunks of inventory essentially breaks up whole-page ads into a patchwork of smaller ads, characteristic of the pages that fill smaller free metro papers or readers.

Some papers could feel this will open the floodgates to questionable advertising or an overall look and feel that is below their level of “class.” However, the terms of the “bid-ask” marketplace allow publishers to accept the ads before they are sold. And overall, the positives outweigh these drawbacks in that this has proved to be a great way to dynamically place remnant inventory late in the publishing cycle, which is otherwise backfilled with house ads. In any case, newspapers aren’t really in a position to be turning away advertising.

In addition, Google is hoping this conversely adds appeal to AdWords and gets advertisers to use Google Analytics more often. These elements all tie together nicely if you think about it: Google Analytics can be used to arm advertisers with the knowledge of certain geographies that could use a boost in sales, and a corresponding print budget allocation. We’ll see what else comes of it. But for now the effort makes a lot of sense.

Meanwhile, Yahoo! continues to develop its “amigos” newspaper consortium. Though it similarly makes inroads to the newspaper world, this setup is much different from Google’s effort. Yahoo!’s efforts instead live entirely online and will work toward beefing up its own content across its network (Yahoo! News, HotJobs etc.) with newspaper content, while conversely providing newspaper publishers much-needed online functionality, technology assistance and online know-how. We’re also bullish on this effort and will continue to watch closely.
__________

Related TKG Reports: White Paper: Newspapers 2.0 Part 4: Building Online Newspapers in a Web 2.0 World, Advisory: Newspapers Team Up Online To Nab National Advertisers

Mike Boland

Mike Boland is an analyst with the Kelsey Group.

This Post Has 401 Comments

  1. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Citysearch Mashup a Model for iPhone App?

  2. Pingback: Мобильный Интернет наступает | Интернет маркетинг. Блог Марии Подоля

  3. Pingback: Today’s Internet Yellow Pages Blogosphere Posts « Jennifer Lind

  4. Pingback: Covering SMX Local and Mobile - Frazier Miller Keynote | The Expand2Web Blog

  5. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » TKG Data and Analysis: A Weekly Recap

  6. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Entering the iPhone Era: New TKG Report

  7. Pingback: Oodle & MySpace Launch Social Classifieds « AdViking

  8. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » SFGate Lifestyle Portal Launches, Powered by CityVoter

  9. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » New Google Maps Interface Launches Today

  10. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Brownbook Following Different Path to IYP Success

  11. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » YPG Enters US Market with Volt Deal

  12. Pingback: Randy Weber » Blog Archive » Citysearch Mashup a Model for iPhone App?

  13. Pingback: Local Search Jobs Are Up

  14. Pingback: OpenBusiness » Blog Archive » Brownbook.net

  15. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » TKG Data and Analysis: A Weekly Recap

  16. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » More on Social/Local

  17. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » TheFind Launches iPhone Application

  18. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Merchant Circle Launches Web Site Creation/Hosting

  19. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » TurnHere Appoints New CEO

  20. Pingback: Ad spend data from Palore at Ghost of Midnight

  21. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » More SMB Video: A Conversation With WelcomeMat

  22. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » New Palore Data Can Help Sales Teams Catch the Big Fish

  23. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Tellier: Volt Deal About Technology, not Footprint

  24. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Tellier: Volt Deal About Technology, not Footprint

  25. Pingback: The Praized Media Product Blog » Blog Archive » Praized on the radar - Media coverage far and wide

  26. Pingback: Startup Chatter by Donna Bogatin » BIG PICTURE » Minitel Meets Wikipedia: Au Revoir Original Research, Goodbye to ‘Truth’

  27. Pingback: Real Estate And Local Video News Roundup: [ WellcomeMat ]

  28. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » TKG Data and Analysis: A Weekly Recap

  29. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » The Wall Street Journal Recognizes SMB Video

  30. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Apple’s App Store: Hot or Not?

  31. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Matchpoint Evolves Ad Product; Integrates Widgets

  32. Pingback: New Media Evangelists Combine Forces | Media News: Internet Marketing & Online Advertisng

  33. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Sensis Bucks Trends with Strong Print Results

  34. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Mapvertising on Virtual Earth

  35. Pingback: Centro Real Cities SEO Debacle

  36. Pingback: Local Online Video Market - $1.5B by 2012? | Video Contest Clearinghouse - Video Competition Opportunities

  37. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » When Will Hyperlocal’s Time Come?

  38. Pingback: G5 Search Marketing » Blog Archive » Who’s Next In Local Advertising?

  39. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Krillion Branches Out, Adds Product Categories

  40. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Video: Google Android in Action

  41. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Local.com Reaches 5000 Advertisers

  42. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Talking Local at SES San Jose

  43. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » SMB Video Gets Play at SES San Jose

  44. Pingback: Matchpoint Weblog » The Kelsey Group blogs about Matchpoint Products

  45. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Google Brings a Taste of Online to Traditional Media

  46. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » TKG Data and Analysis: A Weekly Recap

  47. Pingback: TKG Data and Analysis: A Weekly Recap

  48. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » DriverSide Enhances Local Mechanic Search: Aquires fairBenjamin

  49. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » iPhone 3G Sales Surpass 2G: That was Quick

  50. Pingback: Kelsey Group Blogs » Recommended Reading: The ‘Semantics’ of Local Search

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>