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    Google Buying Channel Intelligence to Help Boost Online Sales

    By
    Todd R. Weiss
    -
    February 7, 2013
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      Google is looking to bolster its online sales capabilities by acquiring a company, Channel Intelligence, that lets consumers buy products directly through product pages on Websites.

      The $125 million acquisition of the company is aimed at stretching Google’s abilities to reach consumers in online marketplaces. Channel Intelligence is an existing partner of the Google Shopping service, according to the company’s Website.

      The deal, announced Feb. 6, is expected to be completed in the first quarter.

      Channel Intelligence offers e-commerce services that help businesses market their products to consumers online through buttons that can show them where they can buy the products they are seeking. Such “where-to-buy” buttons on Websites are used by companies—including Target, Philips, Hewlett-Packard, Neiman Marcus, Best Buy and Kimberly-Clark—to offer their products and help consumers obtain them, according to the company. Using such marketing methods, Channel Intelligence says it tracks nearly 15 percent of U.S. sales transactions online and drives $2 billion in sales referrals.

      “We want to help consumers save time and money by improving the online shopping experience,” a Google spokesperson said in a statement. “We think Channel Intelligence will help create a better shopping experience for users and help merchants increase sales across the Web.”

      One of the company’s products, its Buy Now app, allows online retailers to show potential buyers a “dynamically updated list of online retailers that have the advertised product in stock,” where the consumer can purchase the item instantly, according to CI’s Website. “When a consumer clicks on a retailer’s logo in the ad, he/she is sent directly to the product page on that retailer’s site. This provides the consumer with an easy way to buy products that not only drives impulse purchases, but also influences future online and in-store purchases.”

      CI can then provide online retailers with detailed analytics that track such purchases throughout the process. About 850 retailers in 31 countries use CI technology, according to the company.

      Google has been continuing to build up its e-commerce tool arsenal as it takes on competitors such as Amazon.com in the online retail wars.

      In October 2012, Google unveiled its Google Tag Manager tool to make it easier and faster for online digital marketers to “tag” content on Websites so it can be connected to online users.

      The free Google Tag Manager lets digital marketers consolidate their Website tags with a single snippet of code and manage them all more easily through a Web-based interface. That gives markets greater flexibility and lets Webmasters focus on other important tasks.

      For Google, the CI acquisition and tagging tools like this one are very important because advertising revenue is so central to the company’s success and growth.

      In December, research data from eMarketer showed that Google outperformed analyst estimates for the third quarter, bringing in $5.8 billion to $7 billion globally in mobile ad revenue, according to an earlier eWEEK report.

      Overall spending on mobile advertising in the United States, including display, search and messaging-based ads served to mobile phones and tablets, rose 180 percent in 2012 to top $4 billion, according to eMarketer. That’s expected to reach $7.19 billion in 2013 and nearly $21 billion by 2016.

      Fueled primarily by direct-response advertisers, Google controlled a 56.6 percent share of the U.S. mobile advertising market by late 2012, eMarketer estimated.

      Most of Google’s mobile ad revenue comes from search, and eMarketer estimates Google maintains a 93.3 percent share of the overall $1.99 billion U.S. mobile search ad market.

      Spending on mobile search ads in the United States is expected to jump 55 percent, to $3.6 billion in 2013 —of which Google is expected to earn a 92.4 percent share.

      Todd R. Weiss
      As a technology journalist covering enterprise IT for more than 15 years, I joined eWEEK.com in September 2014 as the site's senior writer covering all things mobile. I write about smartphones, tablets, laptops, assorted mobile gadgets and services,mobile carriers and much more. I formerly was a staff writer for Computerworld.com from 2000 to 2008 and previously wrote for daily newspapers in eastern Pennsylvania. I'm an avid traveler, motorcyclist, technology lover, cook, reader, tinkerer and mechanic. I drove a yellow taxicab in college and collect toy taxis and taxi business cards from around the world.
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