Last Friday, we said that mobile advertising was moving fast. So are we! Today, we closed our acquisition of AdMob. Omar Hamoui has built a great team and great products at AdMob and we’re thrilled to officially welcome them to Google.
We’ll now begin the process of bringing our products and teams together in the best way, and building new products and features together. We’re working to make this integration happen as fast and as seamlessly as possible. We’ll actively keep our clients up-to-date as we bring our businesses together — stay tuned!
It’s clear that mobile advertising is becoming a much larger part of our clients’ and partners’ strategies and with this acquisition, it’s now a central part of our own business. In continuing to invest in this highly competitive area, we’ll be bringing together our technology, resources and expertise in search advertising with AdMob’s innovative solutions for advertising on mobile websites and in mobile applications.
Mobile search is central
One of the key ways that people find and access information on their mobile devices, just like on the desktop, is through search. As smart phones have proliferated, we’ve seen dramatic increases in mobile search volume. Over the past two years, Google's mobile search volumes have grown more than fivefold, at an accelerated pace. In the first three months of 2010, people with smartphones with “full” WebKit browsers (such as the iPhones, Android devices and Palm Pre) searched 62 percent more than they did in the previous three months.
Increasingly, people aren’t just typing search queries into their mobile devices. They speak them, they take photos of them and they even translate them from different languages.
In addition to traditional search ads on mobile devices, we’ve worked to develop entirely new search ad formats. “Click-to-call” search ads, for example, have been really popular. They enable advertisers to include a local business or national phone number directly in their ad text that you can click to reach the business directly via phone. This is a really great way for you to easily get information from a relevant business (say, a local restaurant), and a highly effective way for advertisers to connect with interested customers.
With many more advances to come, search advertising will remain the central way that many businesses connect with consumers on mobile devices.
Mobile websites and apps
In addition to search, another key way that people access information is through mobile websites (accessed through a browser) and mobile apps (available through Apple’s App Store, the Android Marketplace and more).
Mobile display and text ads make it easy for publishers and developers to make money from their mobile websites and apps, and enable advertisers to extend the reach of their campaigns to relevant mobile content. In this area, AdMob has been a real pioneer and has innovated at a tremendous pace, building a successful business and working with thousands of advertisers, publishers and developers.
AdMob was one of the first companies to serve ads inside mobile applications on the Android and iPhone platforms. They’ve developed a host of engaging and creative ad units for Android and iPhone apps—for example, interactive video ad units and expandable rich media ads. Google has also been developing new features for in-app ads. For example, last week, we announced that we’ll be making “click-to-call” ad formats available to developers who run AdSense in their mobile apps. With Google and AdMob starting to work together, there’s lots more innovation to come in this area.
The future
It’s clear that mobile advertising is growing incredibly fast with lots of businesses innovating at great speed. Every day, more marketers are looking to take advantage of the mobile-specific capabilities, extended reach, great returns and value that mobile advertising provides. Advertisers are now starting to see mobile as an essential part of their overall campaigns, not just a silo-ed experiment on the side.
We want to unleash agencies’ and advertisers’ creativity on all mobile devices and deliver them better results from their campaigns, drive better returns and more choice for publishers and developers, and help people get better ads and more free mobile content.
We believe that mobile advertising can play a significant role in every single marketing campaign. We’re passionate about the unlimited possibilities in this space. Today, with AdMob, our work to make them a reality begins.
Stock Repurchase
As previously announced, Google intends to repurchase in the open market a number of shares equal to the number of shares issued in the transaction and issuable upon exercise of outstanding options to purchase common stock issued by AdMob. The repurchase program is expected to commence shortly after the completion of the acquisition. The repurchases will be funded from available working capital.
Kamis, 27 Mei 2010
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Blog Archive
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2010
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Mei
- This week in search 5/30/10
- Happy 1st birthday, Google Wave!
- We’ve officially acquired AdMob!
- Watch efforts to stop the oil spill live and submi...
- Congratulations to Aadith Moorthy, the 2010 Nation...
- The 2010 Doodle 4 Google winner: Makenzie Melton’s...
- Evolving from beta to stable with a faster version...
- Google’s U.S. economic impact
- PAC-MAN rules!
- Google Special Award Winners @ Intel ISEF 2010
- Keeping up-to-date on the Gulf of Mexico oil spill
- Google Apps highlights – 5/21/2010
- Search more securely with encrypted Google web search
- Working with AdMob to move mobile advertising forward
- Celebrating PAC-MAN’s 30th birthday
- Announcing Google TV: TV meets web. Web meets TV.
- Android Froyo, with some sprinkles
- Google I/O 2010 Day 1: A more powerful web in more...
- Celebrating Bike to Work Day(s)
- Simplify common tasks with the new Google Apps Script
- Remember to tune in to live-streamed Google I/O ke...
- Doodle 4 Google, meet the 40 Regional Finalists (w...
- This week in search 5/14/10
- WiFi data collection: An update
- Announcing the Google Model Your Town Competition ...
- Nexus One changes in availability
- Google Voice invites for students
- Five more languages on translate.google.com
- Hello Google Apps, hello real collaboration
- A word is worth 884 pictures
- Understanding the web to find short answers and “s...
- Giving a voice to more languages on Google Translate
- Google @ Intel ISEF 2010
- This week in search 5/7/10
- Google Apps highlights – 5/7/2010
- Schools are (almost) out for summer...and in for Apps
- Honoring those who give voice to the silenced
- The Google design, turned up a notch
- Live, from Google I/O!
- Happy half-birthday Dashboard! Six months in and 1...
- A spring metamorphosis — Google’s new look
- Mapping the Gulf oil spill in Google Earth
- Google Ventures: Year one
- Not merely tilting at windmills — investing in the...
- Introducing Google’s 2010 Anita Borg Scholars & Fi...
- This week in search 5/1/10
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