Google eyes newspapers ads

Google is starting a Print Ads service to extend its business into offline media. It is set to buy advertisements in 50 US newspapers as part of a new a test, the search giant revealed on Sunday.

Google eyes newspapers ads

Google said it has invited more than 100 advertisers already buying ads through its Web marketing system to join a three-month test of a Print Ads service that places ads in daily papers including the New York Times and Washington Post.

If the trial is successful, Google could extend the program to hundreds of thousands of its online advertising customers, offering newspapers a broad new sales channel that could help offset an ongoing decline in classified print advertising.

‘For advertisers, it gives them access to a network of newspapers through an online interface and the ability to potentially reach a new customer base,’ said Google spokesman Michael Mayzel.

A year ago, Google began an earlier test in which it started selling print advertising in a handful of US magazines. However, demand for the service was slow to take off, executives said in May.

Mayzel contrasted the earlier magazine program to the current newspaper test by saying that, ‘This test is not an auction and we are not buying and reselling ad space.’

In effect, Google is giving greater control over how ad sales are made. Advertisers log into the Google AdWords system and select newspapers and available ad space, then upload the advertising artwork. But newspaper publishers retain creative and financial control over whether to approve or reject bids.

The advertisements will appear in 50 metropolitan newspapers, including the Boston Globe, Seattle Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer and Chicago Tribune, along with papers in the Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper chain, the Google spokesman said.

Print advertising joins efforts by Google to expand into radio and video ads, allowing it to move beyond its Web-search marketing business that delivers pay-per-click text ads on its own site and others and accounts for the bulk of its revenue.

In January 2006 it bought the Californian radio ads placement company dMarc Broadcasting and then launched Google AdWords over the airwaves in August, as part of an agreement with XM Satellite Radio to open up advertising slots on non-music channels.

Google already offers click-to-play video ads through websites in its ad affiliate network. It has said it plans to start a public test of its Google Audio Ads that brokers ads on radio stations by the end of this year, Mayzel said.

During the test program, Google’s services will be free, but it plans on taking a sales commission eventually. ‘In the future, we will set up a revenue share model where the majority of the ad revenue will go to the publisher,’ he said.

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