paidContent.org - The Economics of Content

Current Story

Comcast Unhappy With Google On Search Deal; Talking To MSN; Other Ad Inventory Talks

By Rafat Ali - Sun 18 Mar 2007 06:51 PM PST

Comcast, the second largest broadband ISP in U.S., is in talks to use Microsoft’s search services on its broadband portal, a sign the cable titan isn’t happy about its current search deal with Google, reports WSJ, citing sources. The Comcast-Google deal is till the end of this year.
Comcast thinks it should get a larger search ad rev share, and is also is unhappy about other terms of the deal. The company gets about $70 million in shared revenues through the Google deal, but wants $100 million, the story says. The site gets about 15 million visitors a month, and is one of the biggest non-Google sources of search queries handled by Google. Comcast is now talking to Microsoft, though this is just talks and could still renew Google’s deal after renegotiation.
Interesting this: The cable company is looking to expand its other online ad revenues, and is talking to Microsoft, Yahoo and AOL about a three-year deal to sell 80 percent of the advertising on Comcast.net, the story says. It is holding on to the other 20 percent and advertising on its other sites to help it build an in-house broadband sales staff.

Posted in: Advertising, Companies, Comcast, Google



Related Research from Alacrastore.com
1 Response:
Post Your Comment

Mobile Options

» Mobile App
» Mobile/WAP Site

Send a News Tip

About

paidContent.org, flagship of the ContentNext Media network, provides global coverage of the business of digital content.

Rafat Ali
Publisher & Co-Editor

Staci D. Kramer
Co-Editor

David Kaplan
Senior Correspondent

Joseph Weisenthal
Correspondent

Robert Andrews
U.K. Editor

Amanda Natividad
Editorial Producer

Online Ad Deals Report

Social Media Report

New Media/Interactive Job Listings

Post Job
More Jobs

Generous Supporters