TELECOM Digest OnLine - Sorted: Google Plans Move into US Radio Market


Google Plans Move into US Radio Market


Sue Zeidler (reuters@telecom-digest.org)
Tue, 07 Nov 2006 22:38:16 -0600

By Sue Zeidler

Web search leader Google Inc. is hiring scores of radio sales people
and is spending heavily in a bid to expand its position in the $20
billion radio industry.

Google spokesman Michael Mayzel said this week that the company will
begin a public test of Google Audio Ads by the end of the year.
Advertisers will be able to go online and sign up for targeted radio
ads using the same AdWords system they use to buy Web search ads.

Google is generally testing its ability to move into offline media,
this week saying it would help customers buy advertisements in 50 U.S.
newspapers.

It made a clear move into radio in January when it agreed to pay more
than $1 billion, depending on performance, for dMarc Broadcasting
Inc., which connects advertisers to radio stations through an
automated advertising system.

It's all part of what Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt has said is
an investment in radio advertising that could grow over time to
include up to 1,000 Google employees -- not just in ad sales, but also
in engineering and operations.

The fast-growing Silicon Valley Internet company had 9,378 employees
in September.

"Google is hiring salespeople in most major markets and they're hiring
sales people to sell radio. They're paying about 50 percent more than
a typical radio sales person might make," said Bill Figenshu, chief
operating officer of Softwave Media Exchange Inc, a unit of SWMX Inc.

Figenshu said three people he had spoken with believed Google was in
talks to buy about $1 billion in radio advertising inventory from
Clear Channel Communications Inc. Softwave Media Exchange sells radio
ads online and competes with Google's dMarc.

Google declined to elaborate on its plans.

Google's move into radio comes at a time when Clear Channel, the
biggest radio station operator, is weighing a possible sale of the
company.

Clear Channel, which controls an estimated 20 percent of local radio
industry revenues, declined to comment on recent reports that Google
could take a stake in the radio company, perhaps as part of a buyout
led by private equity firms.

Clear Channel's stock closed up 9 cents to $34.54 a share on the New
York Stock Exchange on Tuesday, while Google's stock fell 0.92
percent, or $4.38, to $472.57 a share on Nasdaq.

In a recent research report, RBC Capital Markets analyst David Bank
said he was perplexed by Google's hirings, since they are being made
before it has significant radio advertising inventory to sell.

"While there are other possibilities, we believe there's a reasonable
chance Google Audio is establishing critical mass in anticipation of a
major acquisition of prime inventory. Our sense from recent
discussions with industry players has been most radio operators are
reluctant to offer prime inventory to Google Audio," he said.

Bank said Clear Channel's size and potential sale make it a likely
source of inventory for Google, either through Google taking a modest
investment in a leveraged buyout or by taking a stake in the company's
current incarnation.

Two private equity consortia are looking into making bids for Clear
Channel, sources familiar with the matter said late last
month. Analysts estimated an offer could approach $40 per share,
valuing the company at just under $20 billion.

Other industry sources said Google had been approaching all the radio
operators in recent weeks.

"They've been going around to all the radio groups, trying to do
deals. It seems like a good time to be doing this because business is
so slow, There's a lot of inventory," said one industry executive.

(Additional reporting by Eric Auchard in San Francisco)

Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited.

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