San Francisco Chronicle

Google backtracks on new look

- By Daisuke Wakabayash­i and Tiffany Hsu

A couple of weeks ago, when Dan Shure was searching on Google for informatio­n about butchering meats, he did something he had avoided for 20 years: He unknowingl­y clicked on an ad.

Shure, a consultant who helps companies manage where they appear in Google searches, had always thought it was easy to distinguis­h between paid search results and unpaid links.

That changed Jan. 13 when Google revamped the look of its search results page for desktop computers. Even for someone with a trained eye like Shure, it was hard to see the difference between an ad and a regular link.

“I felt dumb because I had never clicked on an ad before,” said Shure, 40, owner of Evolving SEO, a consulting firm in Worcester, Mass.

In the two decades since the Mountain View company introduced text ads above search results, the company has steadily made ads less conspicuou­s. But its latest look may have

pushed things too far. Users complained that Google was trying to trick people into clicking on more paid results, while marketing executives said it was yet another step in blurring the line between ads and unpaid search results, forcing them to spend more money with the internet company.

The dustup comes at a bad time for Google, which is facing accusation­s around the world that it unfairly takes advantage of its search engine dominance. And it is an indication of just how careful the internet giant now must be when it makes subtle — and sometimes unsubtle — tweaks to wring more money out of its giant ad business.

Regulators and politician­s are investigat­ing Google’s influence over the digital advertisin­g industry. And some advertiser­s are openly challengin­g search ads as a “shakedown” and “ransom” by the tech giant, which controls about 90% of web search.

Ginny Marvin, editor in chief of Search Engine Land, a website that covers the search industry, said there is more awareness among users of Google’s behavior because of recent privacy complaints and government antitrust probes.

“There is much more scrutiny by your regular user who may not have thought anything about this a year or two ago,” Marvin said. “To see them make this change in the face of antitrust regulation” was not going to go unnoticed.

Last month Google said it will eventually strip thirdparty trackers, or cookies, from its Chrome browser, a decision it described as an effort to build “a more private web.” But the American Associatio­n of Advertisin­g Agencies and the Associatio­n of National Advertiser­s quickly complained in an open letter that removing cookies could “choke off the economic oxygen from advertisin­g that startups and emerging companies need to survive.”

The reaction to the recent search page changes was so negative that Google took the rare step of reversing some of the design changes last week. Google said it was “experiment­ing with a change” to the new logos next to the unpaid links, although it did not alter the new ad logo.

Lara Levin, a Google spokeswoma­n, said in a statement that the recent design changes mirrored a new look the company introduced for search results on mobile phones in May 2019. The company tested the new look on desktop search, and the results were positive, she said, but it decided to make some changes to respond to “feedback from users.”

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, is expected to report next week that annual revenue topped $150 billion in 2019. But Google’s ad business is under growing pressure from rivals like Amazon and Facebook.

Money from Google advertisin­g accounts for about 80% of Alphabet’s total revenue. Search advertisin­g is essential to the future of Google, though the company does not say how much it makes on it alone. Magna, a media intelligen­ce firm, estimates that overall search advertisin­g increased 14% in 2019 to about $144 billion.

Google constantly tinkers with the design of its search results page, and its once bare bones approach to search results — characteri­zed as “10 blue links” — has changed dramatical­ly in recent years. The company once tested 41 different shades of blue to find which one users liked best, and it has steadily made its search ads more inconspicu­ous over time.

Increasing­ly, Google’s search results page is not just the onramp to direct you to the most relevant informatio­n on the web, it’s also the destinatio­n. The unpaid links are buried amid a hodgepodge of fact boxes, news links, ads and snippets of text.

For marketers, who rely on Google to bring them web traffic, the blurred lines between ads and regular results make it hard to decipher whether the customers being redirected to their sites are people who were going to come to them anyway or those who stumbled upon them because of the ad.

“You can’t figure out where the highest value customers are coming from if everyone comes in through that paid ad. Right now it’s just a bidding war, and brands now have to buy against their own name as a defense mechanism,” said Amanda Goetz, vice president of marketing at the Knot Worldwide, a wedding planning group. She called the redesign a “transition to this almost deceptive dark pattern.”

Josh Zeitz, another Google spokesman for the ads team, said the design changes were in line with guidelines from the Federal Trade Commission. In 2013, the FTC made recommenda­tions for how search engines should label ads but stopped short of specific requiremen­ts other than that paid results should be “noticeable and understand­able to consumers.”

Google’s recent changes adhered to some of the guidelines but ignored others. Google did not follow what the FTC prescribed for “visual cues” with paid results marked by either “prominent shading that has a clear outline” or a “border that distinctly sets off advertisin­g” from unpaid search results or both. But the new ad icon met the FTC’s recommenda­tion for ad labels to appear before the paid result on the upper left hand side.

Google declined to comment on the record about how it interprets the FTC guidelines, citing a quiet period before earnings. FTC spokesman Mitchell Katz declined to comment on Google’s changes.

Google is not alone in trying to squeeze more revenue from prominent internet properties. Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Amazon are increasing the numbers of ads that appear on their sites and apps and labeling advertisem­ents in different ways.

For Shure, Google’s recent changes were more jarring on desktop than the introducti­on on mobile because there is so little visual difference between the paid and unpaid search results. He said he found that there was no difference in font size, spacing or color between the ads and the regular or organic results. On mobile, each ad is contained within a box and comes with an “i” or informatio­n icon on the right.

“If you look at a result that is ads and organic links, it all looks the same,” Shure said. “And that’s a problem.”

 ?? Jason Henry / New York Times 2019 ?? Google made more difficult it has to differenti­ate ads from search results, but the company said it eased off a bit in response to
“feedback from users.”
Jason Henry / New York Times 2019 Google made more difficult it has to differenti­ate ads from search results, but the company said it eased off a bit in response to “feedback from users.”

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