Google 3Q Tops out Analyst Expectations
Google almost beat the street's expectations today, reporting a 92% increase in quarterly profits, near the top of analyst expectations. Google reported 3Q net income of $733.4 million, up from the year-earlier quarter's $381.2 million. Google reported revenues of $2.69 billion, an increase of 70% compared to 3Q 2005 and an increase of 10% compared to 2Q 2006. Net income was $733 million as compared to $721 million in the second quarter. Note that Google reports its revenues without deducting traffic acquisition costs (TAC). In 3Q 2006, TAC totaled $825 million, or 31% of advertising revenues. Wall Street analysts had projected revenue, excluding what Google pays to AdSense publishers, to rise about 66 percent from a year ago to about $2.62 billion. Forecasts ranged between $2.48 billion and $2.76 billion. "Business is very very good here at Google, and we had an excellent quarter in all respects," said CEO Eric Schmidt, who touted strong user growth, better ads, diversity of the business, strong product launches and multiple partnerships as the reason for Google's success. Schmidt emphasized the company's blizzard of product launches, which he said were "unprecedented in their scale and confusing to almost everyone." Schmidt noted Google's partnerships with eBay, Viacom, Fox Myspace, and Intuit were all very successful. Those partnerships culminated in the purchase of YouTube, he said, characterizing that deal "as the ultimate partnership, if you will." ### Advertising Google's AdSense programs generated revenues of $1.04 billion, or 39% of total revenues, a 54% increase over network revenues of $675 million generated in 3Q 2005 and a 4% increase over 2Q 2006 revenues of $997 million. Current Traffic Numbers Yahoo is second in search, owning 23.4% of the market. Windows Live Search is third with 9.2%, although their share has decreased 12% year over year. Fifth-ranked Ask.com owns 2.7% of the search market and have grown 19% year over year. |
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Comments (4)
"The landing page quality score doesn't actually exist. You don't need to improve the quality score of your landing page, you simply need to bid more. In order to line their pockets, Google has changed the algorithms before the holiday season so that bid price is way more important that clickthrough rate. After the holidays, quality score will be important again."
Posted by Google Watch | November 8, 2006 11:44 AM
"The landing page quality score doesn't actually exist. You don't need to improve the quality score of your landing page, you simply need to bid more. In order to line their pockets, Google has changed the algorithms before the holiday season so that bid price is way more important that clickthrough rate. After the holidays, quality score will be important again."
Posted by Google Watch | November 8, 2006 12:47 PM
"The landing page quality score doesn't actually exist. You don't need to improve the quality score of your landing page, you simply need to bid more. In order to line their pockets, Google has changed the algorithms before the holiday season so that bid price is way more important that clickthrough rate. After the holidays, quality score will be important again."
Posted by Google Watch | November 8, 2006 1:23 PM
"The landing page quality score doesn't actually exist. You don't need to improve the quality score of your landing page, you simply need to bid more. In order to line their pockets, Google has changed the algorithms before the holiday season so that bid price is way more important that clickthrough rate. After the holidays, quality score will be important again."
Posted by Google Watch | November 9, 2006 5:17 PM