Forum Moderators: martinibuster
In my view, it would make a lot more sense for Google to simply allocate its payouts more efficiently: i.e., pay higher amounts to the publishers it can least afford to lose, and pay lower amounts to publishers who are less profitable. This would be a win-win situation for Google: It would retain higher-margin and/or higher-revenue publishers for Google, and--by encouraging less profitable publishers to seek their fortunes elsewhere--it would be lowering the quality of the YPN applicant pool.
As for competition lowering advertiser bids, that remains to be seen. It will be a long time before YPN can supply the kind of inventory that Google has for specialized keywords and keyphrases (especially outside the U.S., where YPN is a newbie). Plus, across-the-board averages don't mean much to individual publishers, as anyone who reads this forum's conflicting reports of declining or increasing EPC, eCPM, etc. can attest. To put it another way, if the bid for "Web hosting" declines on AdSense because YPN can deliver inventory for that phrase, that doesn't necessarily mean I won't earn the same (or more) from Google for "Elbonian kayak cruises" or "nude resorts in Widgetville" or "Shelbyville vacation rentals."
Slide #9 - More Complete Ads SystemNow let’s look at another core element of our business: advertising. Consider that today, 1 in 4 retail dollars is spent online, and you’ll immediately understand the tremendous opportunity before us.
Our ads business for the moment is healthy and growing and we’re on a strong trajectory* projected to grow from $6bn this year to $9.5bn next year based purely on trends in traffic and monetization growth
But strong competitors are attempting to aggregate traffic
* AdSense margins will be squeezed in 2006 and beyond
* Y! and MSN will do un-economic things to grow share
* The ad network will be commoditized over time
But I seriously doubt that Yahoo will make that big an impact internationaly. Their targeting is just not that great unless it's been implemented using their premium publishers api. Their crwling and ad serving technology needs to improve a lot.
In my view, it would make a lot more sense for Google to simply allocate its payouts more efficiently: i.e., pay higher amounts to the publishers it can least afford to lose, and pay lower amounts to publishers who are less profitable. This would be a win-win situation for Google: It would retain higher-margin and/or higher-revenue publishers for Google, and--by encouraging less profitable publishers to seek their fortunes elsewhere--it would be lowering the quality of the YPN applicant pool.
This would be akin to feeding your sows and starving your calves. Google can't survive in the long term without developing its prospects (no company can).
Lots of people have noticed sky-high CPC on YPN compared to Adsense. Now, since Overture bids are often higher than Adwords for the same keyword, this kind of makes sense, but you have to wonder, especially since the CTR seems to be a lot lower on YPN for a lot of folks.
I imagine the big competition is really going to be for advertisers rather than for publishers, so I do expect to see CPC dropping as they fight it out.
Hard to say, though. One thing's for sure: publishers may be in for a bumpy ride. :-)
JK