- Oil Next Week: What Traders Will Be Watching

- Cramer: 5 Earnings Reports to Watch Next Week
- Court Rejects 'Clawbacks' for Alleged Stanford Victims
- Tax Credit Sparking First-Time Home Sales: Realtors
- Investors Cut Back US Stocks for Bigger Growth Abroad
- Where Will the Next Bull Come From?
- White House Plans to Freeze Spending to Cut Deficit
- Cities With the Most Home Price Reductions
- US Consumer Mood Worsens on Worries About Jobs
- Oil Next Week: What Traders Will Be Watching
- Dollar is Not Plunging—So 'Calm Down': Market Strategist
- Strategists Say Markets Have More Upside — But How Much?
- Hirschhorn: Risk-Averse Traders
- Roginsky: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Financial Reform
- This Year's Biggest Thanksgiving Leftover: Cash
- TV Series Inks Unique Deal For Fight
- First Time Buyers Rescue Housing: Realtors
- Dollar General Trades Higher After Its IPO
- Fed Reform? Not So Fast.
- Dutch drivers to pay tax on road time, not on car
- IRS papers say Zsa Zsa Gabor has $118,321 tax bill
- Hawaii planning to replenish sand at Waikiki Beach
- NY Fed president: Crisis can teach finance system
- Taiwan monitor, flat-panel makers announce merger
- Judge rebuked by panel over Ferdinand Marcos money
- Can baseball bring U.S. and Cuba together?
- Mexican revokes permit for Canadian gold mine
- The Gazette in Colorado Springs lays off 11 more
By Alexei Oreskovic
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Google Inc is selling a special search product to online retailers, as the Internet giant widens its hunt for new sources of revenue.
Google Commerce Search, which the company on Wednesday said it would begin selling at a starting price of $50,000 a year, puts a key element of a retail website's shopping experience in Google's hands: the consumers' ability to find merchandise.
Google wants to operate the search capabilities for retail sites on its own computers, using a data feed that the retailers provide of their product catalog. Google, the world's No. 1 search engine for Web pages, can perform searches of a retailer's catalog significantly faster than what is currently available on many retail sites, Google Enterprise Search Lead Product Manager Nitin Mangtani said.
"Retailers convinced me that there's a need for this type of product," Mangtani said, adding that sluggish search performance on retail sites can send shoppers elsewhere and hurt a retailer's sales conversion rates.
He noted that retailers can also save on infrastructure and maintenance costs since Google's product is "cloud-based" -- meaning the software is hosted inside Google's own data centers instead of on a retailer's computers.
The commerce search product is the latest example of Google's expansion from Internet search and advertising-based businesses into technology products aimed at corporate customers.
Advertising contributed 97 percent of Google's roughly $22 billion in 2008 revenue, but the company has said its cloud-based email and productivity software now generate hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue. Google expanded the ad campaign for its software applications globally last month.
Gartner analyst Van Baker said a recent study by his group found that very few large Internet retailers plan to make any changes to their basic e-commerce technology.
"There's not a whole lot of evidence that they're looking to switch," Baker said, speaking about e-commerce technology in general, and not about search functionality in particular.
Google's Mangtani said the commerce search product is not intended for the handful of top-tier e-commerce companies, like Amazon.com Inc, most of which use their own home-grown technology.
But he said there was plenty of demand from the top 1,000 retailers in key markets like the United States and Western Europe. Footwear maker Birkenstock USA is the first customer officially using the product and Mangtani said a "good number" of retailers have been testing it over the past three or four months.
The $50,000 price includes up to 10 million search queries, Mangtani said. The price for retailers whose sites have a volume of more than 10 million will be negotiable on a case-by-case basis, he said.
(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic, editing by Maureen Bavdek)
- Warren Buffett and Bill Gates spoke to Columbia students, and Buffett made the students a startling offer.
- For the chief of cable company Comcast, growth has been about making deals – generally very large deals.
- Some companies may start using insurance to shift carbon risk from their balance sheets to maybe... yours?
- The president and founder of Genesis Today wants to improve America’s health, and thinks Wal-Mart can help.
- Switzerland's privacy watchdog is taking legal action to force Google to make changes to its Street View service.
- A wealthy, distracted Texas driver crashed his million-dollar Bugatti Veyron sports car into a salt marsh, say police.









