As
companies with Internet mapping portals such as
Yahoo and Google struggle to one-up each other with newer features and easier navigation,
satellite imagery companies are taking advantage of that competition and finally seeing a
commercial market for their products.
Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Yahoo showed
its desire to directly compete with Mountain View, Calif.-based Google when the company announced April 11 that it is
incorporating satellite imagery into its Yahoo Local beta program. Google began
incorporating satellite imagery into its Google Maps program back in 2005.
Yahoo is using both commercial and
government imagery for the program, with GeoEye and I-cubed: Information
Integration and Imaging LLC of Fort Collins, Colo., providing the commercial
imagery, according to Michael Lawless, Yahoo Maps product manger, who responded to questions April 20 via
e-mail.
Lawless said Yahoo's
goal is to provide coverage within the United States at a resolution of 1 meter. "There are many parts of the U.S.
that aren't covered very well on other sites, and we've been able to dig up
some of the best coverage available to blanket the entire country," Lawless
said. He declined to disclose when the imagery will be transferred out of the
beta version and onto the standard one.
Dulles, Va.-based
GeoEye also provides imagery to Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft for Microsoft's Virtual Earth and
Windows Local programs. The Microsoft deal dates back to June 2005 -- before
Orbimage Inc. merged with Space Imaging to form GeoEye --
and gives Microsoft exclusive access to the OrbView satellites that were owned by
Orbimage.
Mark Brender, vice
president for communications and marketing for GeoEye, declined to discuss the
specifics of the company's new contract with Yahoo, but said in a telephone
interview April 19 that the deal involves imagery provided by the Ikonos satellites,
formerly owned by Space Imaging.
GeoEye's competitor,
DigitalGlobe of Longmont, Colo., provides imagery to Google for the Google Maps
program.
GeoEye and DigitalGlobe
have not disclosed the amount of imagery each has provided to the mapping
services, or the amount of revenue each has obtained from these deals. But
representatives from both companies cite the contracts as evidence of a growing
market for their products.
"In
general, before Web-based mapping services and search engines existed, the commercial
remote sensing industry barely had a megaphone. But these omnipotent search engines
are creating a sonic boom throughout the industry," Brender said. "The search engines
are finally bringing satellite imagery down to Earth, and will drive more markets for us."
Ed
Jurkevics, an analyst with the firm Chesapeake Analytics of Arlington, Va., said in
a phone interview April 20 that the mapping programs have opened up a whole new
set of customers for the remote sensing industry.
"They're providing a way to bring in consumer
and small business revenues into remote sensing," Jurkevics said. "My
projections say they will represent probably the third-largest customer [behind
the government and foreign ground stations] in the next couple years."
Neither the mapping
engine companies nor the satellite imagery providers would disclose the nature
of how their contracts work. In GeoEye's case, Brender said there is a combination of business
structures involved.
DigitalGlobe spokesman
Chuck Herring said: "We don't discuss the specifics of the Google contract, but
essentially they, like any of our customers, pay to get a licensed copy of our
imagery and use it for several of their mapping applications."
Leaders in the remote sensing
industry have been talking in recent months about shifting their focus to
providing imagery and trying to get away from a dependence on government
contracts.
During a panel discussion at the
National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colo., April 5, DigitalGlobe
Chief Executive Officer Jill Smith said the industry has to stop thinking
like satellite providers and start thinking as content providers.
"We need to change the way people interact with our
imagery," Smith said. "Today, we make it really hard, and we impose a lot of
cost and burden for [people] to add imagery to their mapping and monitoring
applications."
Jurkevics projected
that revenue from imagery for the mapping services probably amounts to around
$25 million annually right now. But taking into account the mapping companies'
desire to expand their imagery of foreign cities, the competition between providers
and a desire from customers for more three-dimensional imagery, he sees the market
growing in the next few years to $125 million to $150 million per year.
"But if all of this fails to produce
consumer interest, these expenditures won't develop," Jurkevics said.
In the meantime, the
companies doing mapping portals are trying to ensure that customers stay
interested in these applications. Lawless said Yahoo believes that by having a better mapping
product, they can leverage existing money-making strategies, such as taking its
business listings and plotting advertisers' locations directly on the maps.
MapQuest, the most frequently visited mapping Web site,
incorporated satellite imagery as long ago as March of 2000, according to Dori
Salcido, a spokeswoman for America Online, which owns MapQuest. But the company
ended up later removing the imagery, citing a drop off in customer interest.
"We had satellite
imagery almost before its time," Salcido said. "The consumers weren't embracing
it at the time. But now people are certainly coming to the Internet for more things
these days and mapping is one of them."
As a result, MapQuest
plans to reintroduce satellite imagery into its program in the fall of 2006,
though details on which company will provide the imagery and how much will be available
are still being worked out, Salcido said.
According to data compiled by
comScore Media Metrix, a Reston, Va.-based consulting firm, in terms of unique
site visitors, MapQuest led the pack of mapping sites in March 2006, with 46,433 unique visitors.
Behind MapQuest were Yahoo Maps, with 19,976 visitors and Google Local with
19,090. MSN's MapPoint program received 1,345 visitors in March, according to
the statistics.
Jurkevics said it will
be interesting to see whether Yahoo follows in the footsteps of Google and
Microsoft and acquires companies that can help them expand their mapping
programs. Microsoft, for example, announced its purchase of Colo.-based remote sensing
company Vexcel in March.
Comments: mfrederick@space.com