Some 637 Chinese e-marketing agencies indicated that
they will file a class action lawsuit against major
search engines like Baidu, Google, Yahoo, and others,
claiming breach of contract, according to People's Daily
Online.
The online Chinese new source also predicted that,
if successful, the suit may force those search engines
"out of business" in China. It is unclear
if the writer of the article was referring to Google
and company or the 637 marketing agencies.
Headed by deputy director of BookSir.com, Fu Dekun,
the complaint alleges that the major search engines
have "stepped in to snatch away clients directly,"
which violates their contractual obligation to act as
marketing intermediaries.
According to the report, marketing agencies in China
operate in a "profit sharing" arrangement
and that 60 percent of their profits come from working
as a go-between. But only 10 percent of the profits
remain after costs of operation are deducted. If the
search engines bypass the marketing agencies, those
small and mid-sized agencies stand to pull in even less.
"Ninety-five percent of agencies are in the red,"
said Fu Dekun.
Together, Baidu and Google control nearly 90 percent
of the Chinese search market.
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