Skip to main content

Look out, ads are coming to Google Images search results

google-office
Lissandra Melo / Shutterstock

Perhaps the most surprising thing about the news that Google is now including ads in its Images search results is that it didn’t do it sooner.

It’s true – the company that makes all its cash from search ads has until now included not a single sponsored message among its image results. But that’s all changing.ads google images

Recommended Videos

The initiative is designed to tempt the shopper in you, so if, say, you do a Google image search on your smartphone for a coffee table, among those many pages of lovely photos of gorgeous tables you’ll also see ads for them. These will link directly to a merchant’s site, enabling you to part with your cash in just a couple of clicks. The merchant wins, you win … oh, and Google wins, too.

The Mountain View company is hoping it’ll further encourage online shoppers to hit its site when looking for a product rather than heading straight to, for example, Amazon to perform a search. Of course, buyers can also visit Google Shopping to search for a product, but including ads on Images offers an additional route to a possible sale.

Google says it’s been making progress in encouraging more shopping searches on its mobile site, with inquiries increasing by a significant 30 percent in the past year.

“Whether they’re looking for a new sofa or the perfect pair of earrings, people who search and shop on their smartphones at least once a week say that product images are the shopping feature they turn to most,” Google Shopping’s Jonathan Alferness wrote in a post announcing the new feature.

For now, ads in image searches are for mobile only, though they’ll likely also come to desktop in the near future. You’ll spot them in a strip along the top of your smartphone screen beneath a “sponsored” sign, so in that way they’ll stand out clearly from the regular results.

Besides ads in images, the Web giant is also improving the experience for online shoppers researching local retailers, allowing inventory checks directly within search so you’ll know your journey won’t be wasted if you go to collect in-store.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
OnePlus 8T vs. Google Pixel 5: Which new phone comes out on top?
OnePlus 8T

2020 is almost drawing to a close, but the smartphone industry still hasn't run out of eye-catching flagships to launch. October saw the release of (among others) the Google Pixel 5 and the OnePlus 8T, both of which offer a range of enticing features at a reasonable price level. The Pixel 5 continues Google's fine tradition of delivering competition-beating cameras, while the OnePlus 8T is a strong all-rounder that lets you recharge its battery faster than you can make a hot meal. They're both lovely phones, but we need to know: Which one is better?

We answer this question by comparing the Pixel 5 and OnePlus 8T in a direct head-to-head. We look at their specs, designs, displays, performance, cameras, software, and special features, while counting which one wins in most categories. This should help you decide which Android flagship is more to your taste.
Spec

Read more
Google to ban ads from appearing next to coronavirus conspiracy theories
medical employee holding mask stylized image

Google will reportedly ban advertisements from running alongside debunked coronavirus conspiracy theories, starting in August.

Under the new policy, supervisors will be able to remove entire ads from articles, as well as ban all advertisements for websites that violate the new rule on multiple occasions, according to CNBC. Google had previously banned ads that made harmful claims about prevention and treatment of the coronavirus.

Read more
Google cracks down on voting-related ads that mislead users to malicious sites
Google Logo

Google is cracking down on ads that mislead people to malicious sites when they looked up voting information. The company on Monday said it has removed several search ads that unlawfully scammed users into paying up to $129 for voter registration, harvested their personal data including credit card credentials, and installed deceptive add-ons on their computers.

The takedown comes after a report published by the Tech Transparency Project (TTP), a non-profit watchdog, that discovered nearly a third of the more than 600 voting-related search ads on Google were manipulative. The ads -- that sit above at the top of the search results -- appeared when people looked up common voting terms such as “register to vote,” “vote by mail,” and “where is my polling place.”

Read more