June 5, 1998
COMPUTER RESELLER NEWS via NewsEdge Corporation : In a scenario reminiscent of a daytime talk show, Web search-engine providers are swapping partners, signing new deals and cancelling earlier contracts.
Yahoo Inc. recently dumped longtime partner Digital Equipment Corp.'s AltaVista search engine in favor of Inktomi Corp. as its underlying search engine. AltaVista now will be shunted to the bottom of Yahoo search pages as a link.
Not to be outdone, after the breakup, AltaVista paired up with Netscape Communications Corp.'s Netcenter Web site. In fact, Netscape recently took on several new partners, including Excite Inc., Infoseek Corp., LookSmart International Ltd. and Lycos Inc.
Excite will help Netscape develop channels and sell ads and will receive 25 percent of Netcenter's traffic rotation. Netscape will give its own search engine 25 percent of Netcenter's traffic, while the rest of the partners-including AltaVista-will receive the remaining 50 percent. Left out of the loop is Yahoo, which has discontinued its Net guide for Netscape.
And there is more. Inktomi, San Mateo, Calif., is not just partnering with Yahoo. Wired Digital's HotBot, CNET's Snap and Microsoft Corp.'s Microsoft Network also are supplementing their users' queries with Inktomi's search engine. And LookSmart, San Francisco, struck deals with AltaVista and San Francisco-based HotBot, giving users of the two search engines access to LookSmart's editorially reviewed search database.
The reason for all this intermingling? Search-engine companies have struck the slew of partnerships to drive people to their Web sites, said Chris Charron, analyst at Forrester Research Inc., Cambridge, Mass.
"It's incestuous, but it's a way to survive," Charron said. " Portal [Web sites] need as many relationships as they can get to generate traffic. Right now, eyeballs are the currency of the Internet."
The nine major portal Web sites-the primary place where Internet users search for data, receive news and access their Web-based electronic mail-now receive 15 percent of the traffic but 59 percent of online advertising dollars, Charron said.
These sites include: America Online Inc., Dulles, Va.; AltaVista, Maynard, Mass.; Excite, San Mateo, Calif.; Infoseek, Sunnyvale, Calif.; Lycos, Waltham, Mass.; Microsoft, Redmond, Wash.; Netscape, Mountain View, Calif.; Snap, San Francisco; and Yahoo, Santa Clara, Calif., he said.
In addition to partnering with each other, these sites work with content providers such as news organizations and travel agencies, Charron said. On average, portal vendors work with 15 companies today; by 2002, the sites expect partnerships with thousands of companies, he said.
But while Internet advertising is expected to increase, search-engine companies still struggle to make money. Only Yahoo and Lycos have turned a small profit, leading some industry observers to predict consolidation down to three to five portal sites within the next 18 months, said Charron.
Consolidation will come in two forms: "old-media" companies, such as Time Warner Inc., New York, could buy them out, or Web sites themselves will merge, he said.
Copyright (c) 1998 CMP Media Inc.
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