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Google’s ad revenue climbs 22 percent

Google’s ad revenue climbs 22 percent

moneyGoogle is still making virtually all of its money from advertising, but those ads are paying off quite well. In its just-released third-quarter earnings report, the company beat analysts’ expectations, thanks mainly to a 22 percent increase in advertising revenue.

The company’s total revenue rose 23 percent compared to the same period in 2009, for a total of $7.29 billion (before deducting traffic acquisition costs). Of that, 67 percent came from ads on Google websites, and another 30 percent came from Google’s ad network (leaving only 3 percent for non-advertising revenue). Paid clicks on Google’s ads increased 16 percent from last year, while the cost-per-click paid on those ads increased 3 percent.

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Net income rose $2.17 billion, up 32 percent from the same period last year. That breaks down to $6.72 per share, beating analyst estimates of $6.69 per share. (Google basically met analyst expectations last quarter.)

Google said its full-time workforce increased to 23,331, up from 21,805 full-time employees at the end of June.

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