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Google sales hit a speed bump in Q1

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Total sales grew by 12 percent, below analysts' projections.

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Google's sales rose 12 percent during the first quarter, the slowest rate of revenue growth since 2013, while the amount it charges for ad clicks continued to drop.

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Total sales for the period ending March 31 came in at US$17.3 billion, missing consensus expectations of $17.5 billion from analysts polled by Thomson Financial Network.

After subtracting traffic acquisition costs, the portion of revenue paid to partners that distribute its ads, Google's sales were $13.9 billion, the company reported Thursday.

Google's net income was $3.59 billion, up 3.9 percent from the same period last year. Its adjusted earnings per share, which excludes certain expenses, also rose, by nearly 5 percent to $6.57, but below analyst projections of $6.60.

The company's paid clicks grew 13 percent compared with the first quarter of 2014. The growth rate in paid clicks has also been slowing progressively. Meanwhile, Google's cost per click, the amount it charges for ads, dropped by 7 percent.

Google's revenue growth has slowed in recent years as people have shifted more of their online activities away from the desktop to devices like smartphones and tablets and to mobile apps. That has put pressure on Google's critical search and display ads businesses, which have been strong on the desktop.

As a result, Google has been working to demonstrate the value of mobile as a platform for services. Just this week, it changed its algorithm to give a boost in search results to sites optimized for mobile devices. The company is also trying to make it easier for consumers to move between mobile web sites and mobile apps, by improving a technology known as "deep linking."

And the company is in the early stages of launching Project Fi, a mobile Internet service that acts as an alternative to traditional carriers by letting users switch between multiple networks and does not charge consumers for unused data.

Google does not break out its revenue into separate desktop and mobile categories.

Google and Facebook still attract the majority of marketers' digital ad budgets in the U.S., according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau.

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