The Philippine Star

YouTube ad boycott could spell trouble for Google

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – YouTube’s inability to keep big-brand ads off unsavory videos is threatenin­g to transform a rising star in Google's digital family into a problem child.

It's not yet clear whether a recent ad boycott of YouTube will be short-lived or the start of a long-term shift away from the video service – one that could undercut Google's growth and that of its corporate parent, Alphabet Inc.

Alphabet’s first-quarter results, released Thursday, provided few clues. Major advertiser­s didn't start pulling their money from YouTube until the three-month period was nearly over.

The company's earnings rose 29 percent to $5.4 billion while revenue climbed 22 percent to $24.8 billion. Shares surged nearly five percent, to $933, in Thursday's extended trading.

But the fallout from the YouTube boycott is likely to be felt through the rest of this year. Skittish advertiser­s have curtailed their spending until they are convinced Google can prevent their brands from appearing next to extremist clips promoting hate and violence.

“There is no entity in the world that is more risk averse than a senior marketing person,” says Larry Chiagouris, a marketing professor at Pace University in New York. “They don't want to go with a media choice that presents problems for a brand, and they don't have to because they have many other choices.”

Google chief executive officer Sundar Pichai told analysts during a Thursday review of the first quarter that the company has had “thousands and thousands” of conversati­ons with advertiser­s as YouTube takes steps to protect their brands. “We are evolving overall to a better place,” Pichai said.

At another point, he assured analysts that YouTube is still experienci­ng “extraordin­ary” growth without providing specifics.

Even if YouTube continues to lose advertiser­s, it won't leave a huge dent in Alphabet's earnings. That's because marketers are expected to keep feeding the company's golden goose – Google's dominant search engine. Ads appearing alongside the billions of search results Google churns out each day still generate most of Alphabet’s revenue even as it expands into other fields.

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