Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Google Buys Ad Space to Stoke Sale of Apps

Google Inc. is so well known that it has become a synonym for search, making advertising unnecessary. Getting businesses to buy Google's online suite of office applications requires a little more elbow grease and marketing muscle.

In a rare commercial campaign, Google is leasing billboards along major highways in New York, San Francisco, Chicago and Boston this month to promote a bundle of business applications that sells for $50 per worker annually. A different message will be displayed each weekday through August, starting with Monday morning's commute.

Google has been peddling its "apps" package since 2007, but only recently realized it needed a more aggressive sales pitch.

"People don't necessarily think of Google when it comes to how we can help companies," said Michael Lock, director of sales and operations for Google's enterprise division in North America.

For now, Google doesn't plan to advertise its business applications in other offline media like magazines, newspapers, television or radio, said Andy Berndt, managing director of the company's creative labs.

The billboard campaign underscores just how determined Google is to lure corporate customers away from Microsoft Corp.'s e-mail service and industry-leading applications for word processing, spreadsheets and scheduling. To a lesser degree, Google also is targeting IBM Corp.

Shuttle aims for Friday morning landing in Florida, 1st Ld-Writethru, US

AP Aerospace Writer= CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) รข€” Space shuttle Endeavour and its seven astronauts are aiming for a landing back in Florida.

Endeavour is scheduled to touch down Friday at Kennedy Space Center, winding up a 16-day flight to the international space station. NASA says the weather should cooperate.

While visiting the space station, the astronauts put on a new addition to Japan's $1 billion lab, installed fresh batteries and stockpiled some big spare parts. They were part of the biggest gathering ever in space. Counting the six station residents, the crowd totaled 13.

Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata is returning home following a four-and-a-half-month space station stay. He says he can't wait to taste some sushi.

Astronaut Wakata's fitness after ISS stay stuns scientists

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla.--The unusually good physical condition of astronaut Koichi Wakata, who walked unaided into a press conference shortly after returning from a 138-day stay in space, has amazed space health experts. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said it planned to determine how Wakata maintained his physical condition by analyzing data logged during his long mission on the International Space Station as well as data being collected during his rehabilitation. Shortly after he...

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