Last week's rumored acquisition of Feedburner by Google has been confirmed. Feedburner CEO Dick Costolo announced the acquisition with his usual flare and humor proclaiming, "FeedBurner has been acquired by Google. The local weather forecast calls for general euphoria with intermittent periods of off-the-rails delight."
In a blog post, Google's VP of Product Management Susan Wojcicki said that Google aims "to give AdWords advertisers broader distribution to an even wider audience of users" and spoke glowingly of Feedburner's current RSS feed advertising platform. As we said last week, this marriage seems like a match made in heaven. Google already controls the most profitable text ad network on the Internet and will now have the opportunity to expand it into a large number of RSS feeds, giving them even more reach. They also gain access to a lot of statistical data about how people consume content.
Costolo laid out his thoughts on where the newly minted Google property is headed:
"The vision is straightforward: publishers who successfully promote distribution and measure consumption will be in a position to derive more value (aka make more money, gain more influence, etc.) from media distribution. Feeds present a simple and ubiquitous opportunity for publishers to embrace distributed media, but content distribution standards without metrics, publicity tools, and monetization engines are ultimately of little value to individuals and organizations whose businesses depend on an ability to maximize and measure reach."
This is a marriage of Google's analytical ability and advertising engine with Feedburner's data and ability to reach a staggering number of RSS readers. No word on the terms of the deal, but initial rumors consistently pegged it in the $100 million range, which we felt seemed on the low side for Feedburner. We'll update this post if more information comes through.
The two companies also set up a FAQ about the acquisition, though it doesn't provide much substance.
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: It's Official: Google Buys Feedburner.
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"Feedburner CEO Dan Costolo announced the acquisition.."
That's Dick's evil twin brother, btw. :)
Posted by: Raj | June 1, 2007 1:28 PMD'oh. Last week I called Dan Cohen of Pageflakes, "Brad Cohen" for no apparent reason, today I call Dick Costolo, Dan.
I have no explanation for why that keeps happening, though I did get a mysterious message from someone earlier today talking about their computer and then reassuring me it was Dan... (though I have no idea who it was).
Thanks Raj, all fixed. :)
Posted by: Josh Catone | June 1, 2007 1:48 PMI fear that this brings closer the day when we'll see widgets in feeds. (More details at my own blog.)
Posted by: Andrew | June 1, 2007 1:55 PMwhy doesn't your trackback URL work?
Posted by: David Dalka | June 1, 2007 4:04 PMDavid, it does work - but due to horrific trackback spam all trackbacks go into moderation. I just approved yours.
Posted by: Richard MacManus | June 1, 2007 6:43 PM