Home Search Yahoo Signs Search And Ads Deal With Google, But Microsoft Is Still In The Picture

Yahoo Signs Search And Ads Deal With Google, But Microsoft Is Still In The Picture

SHARE:

YahooGoogleSearchYahoo is entering into a search pact with Google that will allow it to power its Internet search and ad services with some non-Microsoft juice.

According to Yahoo, the agreement with Google provides Yahoo with “additional flexibility to choose among suppliers of search results and ads.”

Google’s offering will complement the services already provided by Microsoft. It will also enhance Yahoo’s own search and ad tech products, particularly Gemini, its native ads/search marketplace.

Because the deal is nonexclusive, Yahoo has the discretion to decide which ad service it uses to monetize its search queries.

But Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer warned investors on the company’s Q3 earnings call Tuesday to expect the investment in Gemini to suppress revenue in the short term. With the hope that there will be better results and monetization in the long term, of course.

That suppressed revenue is also responsible for the roughly 2% YoY decline that Yahoo saw in its price per click in Q3.

Rather than making a capital expense with Gemini, Mayer said Yahoo will sacrifice some of its revenue in order to test its system, learning how to serve more relevant ads over time by gathering user feedback and interactions on search queries and optimizing results over time.

“Each interaction with a user teaches us something,” Mayer said. “And over the course of learning we can improve our performance.”

But if Gemini is so important to Yahoo, why the search deal with Microsoft and now Google?

“Having partnerships with both of the leading search providers provides for better competition and improved search in terms of user experience,” said Mayer, noting that the extra support supplied by the relationships with Google and Microsoft will help Yahoo “evolve our search to build and invest in differentiating our product, particularly in mobile.”

OK, but how will Yahoo funnel various search queries and how much will the agreement with Google help improve search monetization?

Mayer answered that with a bit of a tease.

“Expect to see a lot of our mobile traffic move to Yahoo Gemini and for us to develop technology that does a good job competitively balancing both Google and Bing traffic for monetization,” she said.

Yahoo will also be working to transition more of its advertisers over to Gemini, moving through its advertiser list vertical by vertical. Roughly 1,000 advertisers are using the Gemini search platform now. It will take each vertical around two or three quarters to optimize results, after which Mayer promised increased monetization and a boost in margins.

According to IgnitionOne in its Q3 digital marketing, the company said it expected for advertisers to slowly adopt Gemini as “the amount of shifted traffic from Yahoo/Bing to Yahoo Gemini increases.” When Yahoo feels more confident in Gemini’s search viability, the same will likely be true for Google.

The three-year partnership with Google will only be implemented following a voluntary regulatory review by the Department of Justice.

Tagged in:

Must Read

What Platforms Say Will Bring Bigger Ad Budgets To Digital Audio

To close the gap between digital audio ad spend and audience engagement, audio platforms want to get more deeply embedded in omnichannel campaign planning tools.

AdExchanger's Big Story podcast with journalistic insights on advertising, marketing and ad tech

Programmatic TV Home Screens And Gaming Ads For Kids

How can companies put ads in new places without hurting the user experience? Smart TV makers, like Samsung, are adding programmatic ads to the home screen, and Roblox will now show ads to users under 13. We examine the trade-offs as platforms expand their ad footprint.

This AI 'Brain' Wants To Get Rid Of The Grunt Work In Creative Campaigns

Innovid’s latest offering serves as the “brain” behind a company’s orchestration layer. Optimum says it reduces manual work and cuts down on execution time.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
multiple sets of eyes

Amazon DSP Adds Adelaide’s Pre-Bid Attention Targeting

Advertisers can target high- and medium-attention ad inventory in Amazon DSP while filtering out low-attention placements and made-for-advertising sites.

Marketers Are Getting Used To AI In The Ad Stack

Marketers and media buyers are gradually getting more comfortable talking about ad campaigns they’re testing on large-language models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

For Video Publishers, Performance And AI Go Hand In Hand

In Connected TV Ad Land, proving performance is the priority for video advertisers. To drive more demonstrable reach and results, publishers are trying to expand their reach while wringing more data and AI features into their offerings.