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2 posts from April 2008

Apr 24, 2008

The Google Numbers Story

Google reported better than expected earnings and their stock price jumped 20%, then the analysts started pointing fingers at comScore saying that their numbers predicted lower than expected earnings based on comScore's PPC trends research that showed a slowing in paid clicks.

Today, comScore released the following press release defending their numbers and pointing out that the analysts used comScore's numbers wrong which showed domestic Paid clicks slowing to draw conclusions about Google's worldwide growth.

Here is the release, it's an interesting read:

When Google announced strong Q1 earnings last week, some financial and media analysts wrote that comScore’s reports of slowing growth in Google’s paid clicks missed the mark. That conclusion is patently false.

Unfortunately, many pundits attempted to draw conclusions about Google’s worldwide revenue performance based on comScore’s domestic paid click data, resulting in an apples-to-oranges comparison. Had they used comScore's domestic paid click data to better understand Google's domestic revenue trends, they wouldn't have missed an important U.S. story and they also likely would have avoided making the wrong call on Google’s worldwide business.

Following several historical quarters of strong sequential domestic revenue growth (including the seasonally equivalent Q1 2007), Google’s Q1 2008 revenue growth was essentially flat, which represented a significant change for Google’s domestic business. Such an important trend was also evident in comScore’s paid click data.

The chart below shows the directional association between comScore’s domestic paid click trends, as compared to Google’s domestic revenue trends.

Google_us

Of course, this is not a perfect correlation because the comScore data do not include the impact of changes in Google’s price per click and do not include paid clicks from partner sites like AOL, Ask, Washington Post, etc. nor paid clicks from the AdSense network. But the strong relationship of the two trends is undeniable.

There is of course a lesson to be learned here. To extrapolate a single data point across all aspects of a company's business can lead to wildly inaccurate conclusions. 

Finally, to confirm the accuracy of the comScore paid click data, we previously published an apples-to-apples reconciliation on this blog. This analysis reconciles the comScore data with metrics shown in Google’s Q1, 2008 financial report. In short, comScore got it right – both quantitatively and qualitatively. What was wrong were the conclusions that some people drew based on inherently flawed comparisons.


Dr. Magid Abraham

President and CEO

comScore, Inc

Apr 10, 2008

What will happen to Yahoo?

The battle over Yahoo has been heating up!  This report from Fortune Magazine indicates that Yahoo is in advanced talks with Time Warner to merge with AOL.  In this deal Yahoo would also take on some cash and buy back some of their stock to prevent a Microsoft hostile take over.

The article additionally talks about Yahoo testing running Google ads...

"Yahoo is also looking at a possible advertising deal with Google (GOOG). Just hours before the news leaked of Yahoo’s advanced talks with AOL, the Internet portal announced that it would run a preliminary two-week test to run Google’s search advertising."

Wow, the various ways this deal might go down are mind boggling.

I think this industry would be a lot better if we had a stronger competitor to Google.  A Yahoo / Microsoft merger, or even a Yahoo / AOL merger would be ok, but I don't think the market place looks good of all of Yahoo's traffic is monetized by Google ads.  Sure this might simplify the ad buying process, but Google is a moving target, and I don't think we all want to be more beholden to one source of traffic and revenues.

Personally, I would like to see Yahoo and AOL merge, and then see Microsoft buy them, that would increase the traffic and make make an interesting ad buying opportunity and alternative to Google ads.

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