Google’s ad targeting improves, Q2 earnings rise 11%

Google is getting even better at showing online ads to the right people at the right time. That enabled the internet search leader to hit analysts’ earnings target for the second quarter and reassure investors about the company’s moneymaking prowess. The results announced Thursday were muddled by Google’s recently completed $12.5 billion acquisition of cellphone […]

Google is getting even better at showing online ads to the right people at the right time. That enabled the internet search leader to hit analysts’ earnings target for the second quarter and reassure investors about the company’s moneymaking prowess.

The results announced Thursday were muddled by Google’s recently completed $12.5 billion acquisition of cellphone maker Motorola Mobility Holdings and a dramatic swing in currency exchange rates that resulted in European sales converting into fewer U.S. dollars than at the same time last year.

This much is clear though: Google has refined its selection and presentation of its internet ads in a way that is more appealing to its users.

The company has accomplished it by analyzing the data that its search engine gathers about people’s interests to determine how and when to present an ad. Ideally, Google wants to show more ads when a user’s request appears driven by a desire to buy a product, book a vacation or engage in some other kind of commercial transaction.

“We’re serious about providing more intelligent results,” Susan Wojcicki, Google’s senior vice-president of advertising, said Thursday during a conference call to discuss the second-quarter earnings. “We’re moving beyond a search engine that just matches strings of words to one that understands people, the world, the way people do.”

Google’s search improvements appeared to pay off during the three months ending in June as the total number of clicks on Google’s ads surged 42% from the same time last year. That’s the highest increase since Google began to report the clicking volume on its ads four years ago.

The clicks are crucial to Google because they trigger the advertising payments that account for most of its revenue.

Google’s gains in the quarter were offset by a deepening decline in the prices that it is fetching for ads. The average price per click plunged 16% from last year. It marked the third consecutive quarter of year-over-year erosion in Google’s ad prices.

The trend, in part, reflects that more web surfing is happening on smartphones and tablet computers, where the ad rates are lower than on desktop computers. The smaller screens on mobile devices also leave less space to show ads.

Google believes mobile ad rates will steadily rise as the nascent market matures and the company develops new ways to connect marketers with prospective customers, including on Internet-connected glasses that the company is testing.

Investors evidently liked what they saw in the second-quarter numbers. Google shares gained $15.94, or 2.7%, to $609 in Thursday’s extended trading.

Some of the doubts weighing on Google’s stock centre on Motorola Mobility, a troubled company whose products are less profitable than Internet advertising.

Motorola suffered an operating loss of $233 million on revenue of $1.25 billion during the final 39 days of the second quarter that Google owned the company.

As a whole, Google earned $2.8 billion, or $8.42 per share, during the three months ending in June. That compared with net income of $2.5 billion, or $7.68 per share, last year.

Revenue climbed 35% from last year to $12.2 billion. If not for Motorola, revenue would have increased 21%. That would have been Google’s slowest rate of revenue growth since the fourth quarter of 2009, when the company was just starting to recover from the Great Recession.

Google’s revenue, excluding Motorola, stood at $8.36 billion after subtracting the ad commissions paid to is advertising partners. That was about $70 million below analyst projections.

The company’s slowing revenue growth stemmed primarily from the economic turmoil in Europe that has weakened currencies overseas.

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