The accounting charge, called a write-down of good will, was essentially a write-off of the value of aQuantive, a digital advertising company that Microsoft bought in 2007. It will take effect in the fourth quarter, Microsoft said in a statement.
The company said it took the write-down because âexpectations for future growth and profitability are lower than previous estimatesâ for the online services unit.
The charge will not affect the online services divisionâs operations or financial performance, Microsoft said.
âItâs disappointing, but it is not a shock at this point,â said Brendan Barnicle, senior research analyst at Pacific Crest Securities. âThe industry has evolved beyond where aQuantive was when Microsoft bought it.â
Microsoft does make money in online advertising, but has relied on a number of digital advertising partnerships.
The deal for aQuantive was struck when technology and traditional advertising firms were desperately seeking footholds in the world of Internet display advertising. At the time, aQuantive was the biggest company Microsoft had bought in its history.
A month before the aQuantive acquisition,
The purchase of aQuantive may well have been driven by pressure Microsoft was feeling at the time, not only from the DoubleClick deal, but by similar acquisitions by other companies. Microsoft bought aQuantive one day after the
All of the acquisitions were in one or another part of the display advertising business across the Web. Once highly profitable by indiscriminately pasting digital ads across the borders of millions of Web pages, the business has become under pressure as companies like Google got better at aiming for individual tastes with search advertising.
With DoubleClick, Google appeared to be using that personalization technology for the placement of banners and other display advertising.
Google used DoubleClickâs huge inventory of Web ads inside AdSense, Googleâs self-serve ad placement technology for third-party Web sites.
AQuantive was a well-respected online agency based in
âIt could have been another DoubleClick, but they would have had to know a business where publishers and advertisers meet, and then invest heavily,â said Todd Sawicki, chief revenue officer at Cheezburger, a publisher of several popular Web sites.
âMicrosoft bought aQuantive in a reactionary move to Google buying DoubleClick, thinking that ad serving was its core strength,â he added. âThen they woke up the next morning and realized what they had.â
Brian McAndrews, the chief executive of aQuantive, was promoted to head Microsoftâs publisher and advertising group in August 2007, but left the company in December 2008. Now a venture partner with the Madrona Venture Group, Mr. McAndrews was recently elected to the board of
The poor performance of aQuantive has not hurt other parts of Microsoftâs online ad business. The companyâs Bing search engine has grown, as has its revenue per search. Microsoft has struck a number of partnerships, including with Yahoo, WPP and App Nexus, which does real-time ad placement.
In
Microsoft still has some innovative ad technology products, said Darren Herman, chief digital media officer at the Media Kitchen, a digital advertising agency. It may be using some of its partnerships to learn more about the online ad business as a prelude to an actual purchase, he said.
âThere are a lot of people that think that Microsoft and App Nexus are going to link up,â Mr. Herman said. âItâs just a matter of when, not if.â Nonetheless, the end of possible competitor to Googleâs DoubleClick ad placement engine left some even outside Microsoft feeling the sting.
â
Tanzina Vega contributed reporting.
No comments:
Post a Comment