Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer downplayed his company’s rivalry with Google on Thursday, saying Microsoft is more focused on creating Internet content and other services that will lure advertising revenue than on what Google specifically is doing.The thought echoed a comment made by Google Co-founder and President of Products Larry Page at a Google press event the day before. Page said that Google is too busy creating its own services to cast more than a wary eye on Microsoft. But despite all the tough-guy posturing, no one would deny that Google and Microsoft are on a collision course, at least in the Internet advertising space.Ballmer at least made that clear Thursday at an event sponsored by the Churchill Club and Commonwealth Club in Santa Clara, Calif. He said Microsoft is determined to climb to the top of the Internet advertising revenue chain from its current number-three position. That means Google, which is number one in Internet advertising revenue, is in the company’s way, Ballmer said.“We’d like to be number two and then number one in advertising,” he said in answer to questions from Roger McNamee, co-founder and general partner of venture capital firms Integral Capital Partners, Silver Lake Partners and Elevation Partners. When asked about Microsoft’s position in relation to Google, Ballmer skillfully redirected the conversation to Microsoft’s plan to provide Internet-based services and content through its Windows Live, Office Live and MSN brands to create “collateral” for advertisers. “Let’s not focus on Google,” Ballmer said. “The key is, what about the advertising business model? Have we done everything we need to do to drive advertising as a business model?”He acknowledged that Microsoft arrived late to the Internet advertising market, but the company’s plan to invest US$2.4 billion in research and development next year—at least $1.1 billion of that in its MSN online property, which includes its advertising platform, AdCenter—will change that. “In creating AdCenter, we think of it as an eBay for advertising. How do you bring buyers and sellers of advertising together? How do you do it in a way that creates value for both of those?” Ballmer said. “We think we have a lot of ideas around that topic, but in a sense we’re a Johnny come lately. The guys that came first were Overture, then Google, and we’re late to the game, but we get what’s going on.”Ballmer also cited Microsoft’s long history of patiently chipping away at a market until it achieves domination as a precedent for its plan to overtake competitors, including Google, in Internet advertising.“People said we wouldn’t get the browser right, and we did,” he said. “People said we wouldn’t take care of Novell [on the OS front], and we did. … We will show our usual innovation, but also our patience. It distinguishes us from technology companies that aren’t so patient.”Ballmer added that, realistically, it could take Microsoft about five years before it achieves its Internet advertising goals.-Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News ServiceThis article is posted on our Microsoft Informer page. For more news on the Redmond, Wash.-based powerhouse, keep checking in. For related news coverage, read Microsoft Chases Online Ad Revenue With Ad Center and Microsoft Nears Massive Ad Deal.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content feature 13 essential skills for accelerating digital transformation IT leaders too often find themselves behind on business-critical transformation efforts due to gaps in the technical, leadership, and business skills necessary to execute and drive change. By Stephanie Overby Jun 05, 2023 12 mins Digital Transformation IT Skills tip 3 things CIOs must do now to accurately hit net-zero targets More than a third of the world’s largest companies are making their net-zero targets public, yet nearly all will fail to hit them if they don’t double the pace of emissions reduction by 2030. This puts leading executives, CIOs in particul By Diana Bersohn and Mauricio Bermudez-Neubauer Jun 05, 2023 5 mins CIO Accenture Emerging Technology case study Merck Life Sciences banks on RPA to streamline regulatory compliance Automated bots assisted in compliance, thereby enabling the company to increase revenue and save precious human hours, freeing up staff for higher-level tasks. By Yashvendra Singh Jun 05, 2023 5 mins Digital Transformation Robotic Process Automation feature Expedia poised to take flight with generative AI CTO Rathi Murthy sees the online travel service’s vast troves of data and AI expertise fueling a two-pronged transformation strategy aimed at growing the company by bringing more of the travel industry online. By Paula Rooney Jun 02, 2023 7 mins Travel and Hospitality Industry Digital Transformation Artificial Intelligence Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe