Google, Banners, and Portal Fear
It's a testament to Google's influence in the search field that any mention
of banner ads on Google pages is met with widespread fear, curiosity, cynicism, reassurance from the company, and further
questioning. the further questioning was recently conducted by Danny Sullivan at SEW, who found Marissa
Mayer on vacation and tried to clarify how much wiggle room Google has left itself on the question of banner ads. Mayer
affirmed, as she had already in the
Unofficial Google blog, that banners on the Google home page (as presented to users not signed in) were out of the
question, and any reasonable observer would believe this. Google's trust equity would be damaged by flashing ads on the
famously pristine flagship page, and nobody knows that more than Google.
Danny did coax Marissa Mayer to acknowledge that the personalized home page is another story entirely, and that targeted ads (text and banner, presumably), are not out of the question there. Not soon, though, according to Mayer.
Danny did coax Marissa Mayer to acknowledge that the personalized home page is another story entirely, and that targeted ads (text and banner, presumably), are not out of the question there. Not soon, though, according to Mayer.







1. Battelle also, has gotten a clarifying personal interview with Marissa, spiced with insightful reader critiques.
http://battellemedia.com/archives/002163.php
Posted at 11:12PM on Dec 28th 2005 by Search Engines Web