« Search Illustrated: The Anatomy Of Successful Paid Search Ads | Main | Judge Denies Punitive Damages In Viacom Vs. YouTube Case »
Mar. 11, 2008 at 8:39am Eastern by Greg Sterling
Google Expects To Be "Very Significant" In Display Ad Segment
Display advertising currently represents about 32 percent of total US online advertising, according to the IAB. That's roughly $6.7 billion. Google already dominates the roughly $8.5 billion US search market. But Google's Tim Armstrong told the Bear Stearns Media Conference in Palm Beach, Florida yesterday that Google expects, in the not-too-distant future, to have a "very significant" position in online display advertising, and if the company didn't achieve that he would be "very disappointed."
Armstrong added, according to Dow Jones, that Google's platform "will evolve over time so that it won't distinguish between search and display ads." Discussing Google's display outlook, Armstrong's remarks focused on opportunities associated with YouTube. But the impending DoubleClick acquisition, which European regulators appear poised to approve, will also bolster Google's position in display.
At the conference, Armstrong addressed a range of other online advertising issues such as behavioral targeting and advertising on social networks, indicating that Google now had a team dedicated to improving monetization of social media.
|
Like The Story? Vote For It On Yahoo Buzz!
Send me the monthly search newsletter too! (Learn more about our newsletters and feeds) |
|
Subscribe To Our Search Feed! |
| Share & Bookmark This Story! |
By Greg Sterling
Permalink
Jump To Comments
See Related Stories In: Google: Acquisitions, Google: Business Issues, Google: YouTube & Video


