News

Google Offers To Run Site Search Engines

Google Inc. is offering to run the search engines of small Web sites for as little as $100 per year, marking the company's latest attempt to make more money off technology that already steers much of the Internet's traffic.

The service scheduled to be unveiled Tuesday is aimed at the millions of Web sites that either don't have search engines or are unhappy with the quality of their current search results, said Nitin Mangtani, a Google product manager.

The price for Google's "Custom Search Business Edition" will start at $100 annually to sift through up to 5,000 Web pages. Larger Web sites can pay Google $500 annually to search up to 50,000 Web pages.

That's a significant discount from the fees that Google has been charging for scaled-down versions of its Internet-leading search engine. The price for the so-called Google "Mini" -- a combination of hardware and software introduced more than two years ago -- starts at $1,995. More sophisticated iterations of Google's search engine cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Google has been offering a free version of custom search since last October to Web sites willing to show ads selected by the Mountain View-based company. The results produced by the free service directs traffic to Google's Web site.

Web sites that buy the new business edition will be able to block Google's ads. The search results also will be displayed on the customer's own Web site.

The discount service underscores Google's determination to build upon the immense popularity of its own search engine, which has become synonymous with looking things up online. Besides serving as the centerpiece of Google's own Web site, the search engine has become the hub of the Internet's most lucrative advertising network.

In June, Google's search engine handled nearly half of all online search requests in the United States, according to statistics released Monday by comScore Media Metrix. Its closest rival, Yahoo Inc., was a distant second with a 25 percent share.

The advertising funneled through Google's search engine generates virtually all of the company's profits, which have totaled $5.8 billion since its initial public offering in August 2004.

In an effort to develop new sources of revenue, Google has been licensing its search technology and other software applications. To bolster its push into the corporate market, Google last week announced plans to buy e-mail security firm Postini Inc. for $625 million.

The expansion has only yielded modest dividends so far. Software licensing has accounted for just 1 percent of $22 billion in revenue since its IPO.

With its latest service, Google is betting that it can attract millions of dollars in additional revenue by giving Web site owners a simple and inexpensive way to help visitors find merchandise or content.

Most small Web sites should be able to customize their own search engines on Google's technology in about 10 minutes, Mangtani said. The entire process can be completed online, as long as a Web site doesn't need more than 50,000 Web pages to be searched.

Offering the new service won't create a lot of extra work for Google because the company already regularly crawls through billions of Web pages to ensure its index contains the latest Internet content.

Featured

  • Report: Cost, Sustainability Drive DaaS Adoption Beyond Remote Work

    Gartner's 2025 Magic Quadrant for Desktop as a Service reveals that while secure remote access remains a key driver of DaaS adoption, a growing number of deployments now focus on broader efficiency goals.

  • Windows 365 Reserve, Microsoft's Cloud PC Rental Service, Hits Preview

    Microsoft has launched a limited public preview of its new "Windows 365 Reserve" service, which lets organizations rent cloud PC instances in the event their Windows devices are stolen, lost or damaged.

  • Hands-On AI Skills Now Outshine Certs in Salary Stakes

    For AI-related roles, employers are prioritizing verifiable, hands-on abilities over framed certificates -- and they're paying a premium for it.

  • Roadblocks in Enterprise AI: Data and Skills Shortfalls Could Cost Millions

    Businesses risk losing up to $87 million a year if they fail to catch up with AI innovation, according to the Couchbase FY 2026 CIO AI Survey released this month.