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Google Gets Out in Front of Mobile Ad Market

By Erik Sherman | Nov 24, 2009

Google (GOOG) CEO Eric Schmidt has said, “we make money, and lots of it, it turns out, from advertising on mobile phones.” And since the company snatched AdMob out from under Apple (AAPL), that amount is only going to get larger.

According to IDC, the $750 million acquisition of AdMob will give Google a 24 percent mobile advertising revenue market share. That’s a huge chunk, and yet not so large that it is likely to cause the Department of Justice to release the hellhounds of its antitrust group. The 24 percent number comes from estimates by IDC analyst Karsten Weide:

  • Millennial Media: $51 million
  • AdMob: $40 million
  • Yahoo! (YHOO): $32 million
  • Google: $28 million
  • Microsoft (MSFT): $23 million
  • Quattro Wireless: $21 million
  • Jumptap: $11 million
  • AOL: $7 million

Put Google and AdMod together and you’ve got the $68 million out of IDC’s estimate of $287 million for 2009 U.S. mobile advertising. Here are the percentage breakouts:

  • Millennial Media: 18%
  • Ad Mob: 14%
  • Yahoo!: 11%
  • Google: 10%
  • Microsoft: 8%
  • Quattro Wireless: 7%
  • Jumptap: 4%
  • AOL: 2%
  • Other: 26%

According to IDC:

The revenue numbers are based on the number of ad impressions served by these entities (either as published by them, or estimated based on their audience reach and an industry-average number of impressions per user) multiplied by an estimated average CPM rate (cost per mille, cost per 1000 ad impressions).

Granted, these are figures for the U.S. only, but they help put some things into perspective. For example, why is Android so important to Google? Because it gives the company a chance to control more mobile advertising. Why is the dropping smartphone market share of Windows Mobile such a problem for Microsoft? Because CEO Steve Ballmer is hot for ad revenue as a way to fuel growth (because products alone aren’t going to do it) and the company faces an uphill battle at the desktop. Now it’s facing an increasingly steep slope on handsets as well. Even if it can sweet talk Yahoo into handing over that part of advertising as well (probably unlikely), it’s still behind the Google eight-ball.

I’m guessing that we’re going to be seeing Microsoft look at some acquisitions, or at least some deals, in this space. Millennial Media, which just raised $16 million in C round equity funding, looks like a ripe candidate. Given that it’s somewhat bigger than AdMob, any guesses on how much it would take to make a purchase?

Image via stock.xchng user straymuse, site standard license.

Erik Sherman is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, Technology Review, the Financial Times, Chief Executive, and other publications. Follow him on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    editor@...

    11/25/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Google Gets Out in Front of Mobile Ad Market

    Isn?t it nuts that mobile ad networks aren?t prepared to share revenues with an analyst outfit like IDC so they can give us an accurate picture of market share? What have ad networks got to hide?
    Anyway leaving the difficulties of calculating ad network market share, the important question for any regulator scrutinizing the Google/AdMob deal or a purchaser of one of the other many mobile ad network is: are all mobile ad networks the same? The answer is NO.
    When you study them, they?re quite different ? not just in geographical coverage (though virtually all mentioned here, have the majority of their business in the US), but also in business model. AdMob is a blind network ? i.e. mass market and is predominantly CPC. Millennial and Quattro still do a fair amount of blind advertising but are much more focused on premium publishers and advertisers and so will do a lot more CPM than AdMob. Microsoft ? you know they?ve already bought a mobile ad network (Third Screen Media back in 2007)? ? I believe doesn?t do any blind advertising.
    If you want to know more about the different mobile ad networks, I recommend this guide: http://www.mobithinking.com/mobile-ad-network-guide

  •  
    2

    ErikSherman

    11/25/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Google Gets Out in Front of Mobile Ad Market

    Clearly Microsoft had bought someone because it's in the rankings. However, I suspect it will try to expand through acquisition, as this is one area that Google doesn't yet have all nailed down.

  •  
    3

    anobject

    11/25/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Google Gets Out in Front of Mobile Ad Market

    I'm very close to these companies first of all. I'm one of their
    biggest publishers. Millenial is not "bigger" than Admob. The
    numbers that are reported many times do not count the iPhone
    ads which is where Admob dominates completely and the
    primary reason for the acquisition. Millenial leads Admob in
    traditional mobile web while Admob dominates in the more
    valuable Smartphone App-Web ad traffic which sometimes is not
    reported yet represents 60% of their revenue. Millenial makes
    itself look bigger constantly and puffs itself up exactly so you
    guys put them up as #1 in these conversations. Yet Google saw
    through all that and acquired the real #1 by far in the most
    important metric.

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