Google, Telstra sign deal for Yellow Maps

Google and Telstra subsidiary Sensis has signed a deal to integrate the data from its Yellow Pages business listings into Google Maps Australia.

"We are looking to our relationship with Google to find as many customers as possible for the Yellow advertisers," Sensis CEO Bruce Akhurst said this morning of the deal.

"Today we have something like 11 million Australians every month using the Yellow Pages service about 150 million times a month," he said. "We have something like 600,000 small businesses [that] have advertised through Sensis."

Akhurst said this deal extended to all Yellow services. "If you advertise with Yellow Directory, Yellow Online, Yellow Mobile or our telephone service 1234 ... you will now be able to be found through the Google search engine and the Google distribution."

(Credit: Sensis)

When asked about Whereis.com, the Sensis business that competes directly with Google Maps, Akhurst said the business would continue in its current form.

"Whereis is a business that has sat alongside the Google Maps business for some time — we supply much of the location and navigation that goes into automobiles and the portable nav devices. That business will just continue," he said.

Google Australia's general manager Karim Temsamani said that the new data would increase the functionality of Maps, with an aim to drive more traffic to the service.

"When we launched Street View a few months ago, we saw a 5,000 per cent increase in the number of searches [for] Google Maps," Temsamani said. "[Yellow business listings] is not the only source of information you can find on Maps, but it is the most comprehensive source of data you can find on Australian businesses ... this will really improve the quality of our maps."

(Credit: Google)

Both Google and Sensis declined to supply the value of the deal or its duration. Temsamani said the Yellow business listings will be integrated into Google Maps from the first quarter of 2009.

Sensis recently clashed with the Australian Consumer and Competition Commission regarding misleading advertising on its subsidiary site, The Trading Post. Google also faced the ACCC in June.

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Talkback 7 comments

    Dance with the devil.. Mark N -- 03/11/08

    I don't know if I like google having anything to do with Telstra. I would much prefer Telstra sink into the ocean and become a distant memory

    Distant memory Anonymous -- 04/11/08 (in reply to #320115517)

    The only way Telstra will ever become a distant memory is when you get Alzheimer.

    Dancing with the devil Anonymous -- 04/11/08 (in reply to #320115535)

    Likely outcome is that Google simply takes over these directory services - Google Yellow perhaps?

    Stand back opposition. Sydney Lawrence -- 04/11/08

    Telstra+Google, magic. If God be for who can be against.

    Delusional Simon -- 04/11/08 (in reply to #320115534)

    Sydney, are you getting delusional on us? I don't see any god mentioned in the article. In answer to your question, I guess the poor schmucks who've been developing a search engine would be against.
    Its good to see that they finally saw sense and gave up re-inventing the wheel. Better late than never..

    Sydney is a traitor who has two bob each way on everything Whatchagunnadu -- 05/11/08 (in reply to #320115534)

    Sydney, you constantly crap on about Telstra being this fantastic Australian company yet you now go into bat for its American CEO climbing into the cot with the Internet's worst nightmare - Google.

    Telstra went on a buying spree some years ago, purchasing The Trading Post, Universal Press - owner of UBD and Gregory's street directories and maps and a few other companies that all form part of the mighty Sensis empire. What will happen to all this now that Sensis is going to basically resell Google?

    Sydney is a traitor who has two bob each way on everything and just follows blindly whilst companies like Telstra and Google destroy competition and dictate to Internet users. To hell with both of them. Sol is a bloody hypocrite too. His "Google Schmoogle" comment has morphed into "Come to daddy".

    Poor old True Local Mark E -- 04/11/08

    True Local (owned by News Ltd) has a similar deal to supply business listings for Google Maps. The TL deal has been operational for quite some time. Does this mean Google will provide duplicate listings from TL and Yellow... or has Rupert been dumped for Sol?

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