Does a Google-Twitter Acquisition Threaten Microsoft, Yahoo?
The online world has been positively abuzz with news of a potential Google acquisition of Twitter. While the blog TechCrunch has quoted sources as saying such a deal is imminent, others, such as BoomTown, say such talk is the purest speculation.
In either case, however, a big question presents itself: how an acquisition of Twitter by Google would affect Google's competitors in the search space and online advertising market, most notably Microsoft and Yahoo.
Twitter has been boosting its search capabilities, including transferring its search bar from search.twitter.com to its main Website and establishing a "Trends" menu to allow users to see in real time the most talked-about subjects on the site. Any deal between Twitter and Google would bring these capabilities under the search giant's roof.
At the same time, Google could potentially make use of AdSense on Twitter
users' pages, exposing Twitter users to contextual ads multiple times per day. Twitter's
monetization potential would expand, as the company could receive a substantial
percentage of the revenue generated from such ad placements; recently, Twitter
has been experimenting with sponsored
sites and commercial
accounts as ways to generate cash flow.
But what would such a merger do to Microsoft and Yahoo?
"I would certainly see it as a threat to Microsoft, which really needs to
provide a boost to its search engine," John Byrne, an analyst at
Technology Business Research, wrote in an e-mail. "Differentiating by
offering superior search around user-generated content and specifically
microblogging could be one way for Microsoft to differentiate its search engine
and unlock Google's grip on search."
Were Twitter already bought, obviously, Microsoft would have to look for another company to fill that void; given Twitter's current momentum in the microblogging space, that task could present a substantial challenge.
Acquiring Twitter would also help Google's bottom line (and hurt its competitors) by adding "tremendous stickiness and traffic," according to Karsten Weide, an analyst with IDC.
"Microblogging is becoming an accepted new channel of online communications in addition to e-mail and instant messaging, and it is here to stay," Weide said. "Does [a Twitter acquisition] make sense for Google? They don't really need more audience reach than they already have. But they might need to keep that audience reach out of others' hands. Microsoft and Yahoo come to mind."
Given the relatively low amount of revenue that Twitter generates at this
point, however, Weide said he feels it would be prudent for Google to pay as
little as it possibly can.
"I think an acquisition would make sense, and if they can get it for less
than [$1 billion], the better it is," Weide said.
This contrasts with the view of a number of business pundits online, who
have been urging Google to snatch up Twitter no matter the dollar amount
required.
As for the potential success of AdSense placed on Twitter feeds, Weide pointed
to the former's presence on MySpace, which generates substantial guaranteed
revenues for the social networking site but hasn't been contributing mightily
to Google's bottom line.
"I doubt [ads on Twitter] would do any better than on MySpace," Weide
said.
In other words, although Yahoo and Microsoft could certainly use a
microblogging aspect to gain a search advantage, acquiring Twitter might not be
the coup de grace that Google needs in order to establish search engine
dominance.
Microsoft's deal with ExecTweets, though, shows that Microsoft has an interest in engaging with microblogging as a tool in its online strategy. And should that interest allow Twitter to lever a few more dollars out of Google in any possible deal, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer probably wouldn't complain.
