Friday, May 14, 2010

The mobile, Internet and media space in India biggest opportunities for Google

The mobile will change the Internet'

Last updated on: May 14, 2010 11:57 IST
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If you scan the mobile, Internet and media space in India, where do you see the biggest opportunities for Google, and how will this translate into products?

We think of the Web as a place to offer products to the consumers and to the advertisers.

On the consumer side, we are very bullish about the mobile. The implementation of a full Web-capacity browser on a mobile phone (like Google's Android) will change the market. Then there is YouTube and the partnerships we have with content providers, for example, IPL, Rajshri Films and Zoom.

On the advertisers front, we are helping them learn how to use the Web better for brand advertising and also to use search advertising for lead generation. You could launch a product and build awareness on Orkut, YouTube, etc.

Words, which allows advertisers to place ads against search results best suited to their business, is particularly suited to small businesses because they have small budgets for creative and media buying.

Plus they want a quick sense of the return on investment. In India, it is particularly significant because the small business segment is very underserved. Most other markets had decades of yellow pages, which helped small businesses grow.

So far, we were selling AdWords on a self-service model. Now we have, besides the self-serve model, an assisted form of AdWords for small businesses.

Our experience with telesales, to call and evangelise the proposition of AdWords, has been great. We have even done roadshows on how to use it in places like Chandigarh. We are closing enough business on this to cover the cost of assistance.

Do you see any changes in usage patterns, from consumers or advertisers?

Three years ago, most customers for our search-based business were online firms. Now we see more broad-based acceptance. There are consumer electronics companies, telcos, airlines, financial services firms, educational institutions, etc.

We now engage with CMOs and CEOs, instead of sales managers. We are seeing clients spending anywhere from Rs 5 crore (Rs 50 million) to Rs 25 crore (Rs 250 million) on digital services.

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