Search Results for 'ask.com'

Ask.com Acquires Sendori

Ask.com / IACThe DN Journal reports that the Ask.com division Ask Sponsored Listings, which is an IAC company, has acquired domain monetization company Sendori. Founded in August 2006, Sendori is a relatively new service acting as a middle-man between owners of premium type-in domains and advertisers looking to buy additional quality traffic to their websites.

Instead of monetizing the domain through a parking page and earning money per click, Sendori allows domain owners to directly sell their traffic to advertisers who will pay per visit. This has made Sendori’s advertising program an innovative approach to matching the needs of traffic buyers and those owning the traffic sources, the domain name owners.

SendoriDirect navigation traffic is high-quality traffic that converts well, so buying direct traffic is a good option for businesses to send thousands of additional clients to their online destinations every day. At the time of the acquisition, Sendori had 130,000 advertisers buying a total of 33 million page views per month. This massive amount of traffic surely is one of the reasons why Ask.com/IAC has been interested in the company. It’s also a good addition to Ask.com’s portfolio of online businesses. Today, every search and online marketing business needs a strong base of advertisers and traffic to be able to compete with Google to some extent instead of completely falling behind. Ask.com has shown deep knowledge of the value of generic domains in the past: Last year it bought the Lexico Publishing Group, owner of the Dictionary.com portfolio of domains and websites. Other domains part of that deal were Thesaurus.com and Reference.com.

The takeover of Sendori marks an important strategic move by Ask.com, which now has a lot more traffic to drive to its growing group of online advertisers. It is a small player compared to Google, therefore this was also a necessary acquisition.

Internet Mergers & Acquisitions

These Internet mergers are widely reported by now, so I’ll quickly point you to reliable sources for the detailed coverage.

1) Ask.com buys Lexico, owner of Dictionary.com

IAC/Ask.com is buying Lexico Publishing Group, which is the owner of generic domains and online businesses Dictionary.com, Thesaurus.com and Reference.com. This will get Ask a great pile of additional unique traffic and make it the ninth biggest destination on the web in terms of the number of visits.

Click here for a detailed article about this acquisition.

2) CBS going to buy CNET

CBS Corp. said it was going to acquire CNet Networks Inc. for about $1.8 billion or $11.50 per share, which represents a 45 percent premium to its closing price on Wednesday. With this timely acquisition CBS wants to expand its reach across the Internet. I have always wondered why CNet has not been acquired earlier, taking into account their top-notch domain portfolio. The company owns many valuable generic domain names such as News.com, MP3.com, TV.com and Search.com inter alia, as well as established websites and online businesses. The acquisition has still to be approved by CNet’s shareholders.

Click here for detailed coverage about this transaction.

Google reaches all-time high

Online competitive intelligence service Hitwise yesterday released the latest U.S. search statistics for April 2008. It announced that Google hit an all-time high, accounting for 67.90% of all U.S. searches. This marks a 0.65% increase over March this year and a 2.64% increase over April 2007.

Continue reading ‘Google reaches all-time high’

Ask.com TV Commercial

[via Owen Frager's Blog]




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