Growing pains at Google?
Source: -
CNET News.com
Google reminds me a lot of Microsoft, especially
during the early days before Bill Gates
became a Davos fixture and started hanging
with Bono. The common theme: loads of smart
people running around chockablock with big
ideas about how technology's going to change
the world.
How rich, then, that Google is realizing
Microsoft's biggest ambition of putting
information at your fingertips.
CEO Eric Schmidt no doubt recognizes the
delicious irony. Throughout the 1980s and
1990s, he competed against Microsoft while
at Sun and Novell. But each time he was
the underdog. Now the shoe is on the other
foot.
Google earlier this week rolled out even
more additions to its already impressive
inventory of Web offerings and shows no
sign of slowing down. If you're Microsoft,
this is bad news in bells. And if you're
Yahoo, this is time to sit up and take notice
that you're next.
Google's newest feature lets people personalize
their home pages with different modules
that they can drag and drop across their
page. The first run of content providers
includes the BBC, The New York Times, Slashdot
and Wired, but more will follow. Full RSS
support will later be included, and advertising
will dot the home page. My Yahoo, meet My
Google.
Web surfers obviously like what they see
from Google, because they keep returning
for more. In the roughly nine months that
it's been a public company, Google's been
knocking the ball out of the park each quarter.
The stock price is headed toward the outer
rung of Jupiter, and you've got to wonder
whether these guys will ever stub their
toes.
Excuse the rhetorical exaggeration. But
if there's one constant in the technology
business it's that the industry is in a
state of permanent flux. So history suggests
Google's tumble will come as well. But what
beats me is when--next month, or next millennium?
Unlike the phony management teams that stunk
up the pre-bubble days, Schmidt and Google
founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page are
hard-core techies with a passion about their
business. What's more, they have figured
out a way to flourish within an odd triumverate
that I thought would have fractured long
ago.
Microsoft's now trying to make up for lost
time with new search features and promises
of more when the Longhorn operating system
arrives late in 2006. I would never underestimate
Microsoft, but Google's biggest enemy remains
itself.
At times, the company's appetite has overtaken
its good sense--Google's tone-deaf handling
of the public uproar over Gmail last year
being the most telling example. Privacy
advocates flipped out when they learned
the company was scanning the content of
e-mail messages in order to serve up targeted
ads. So much for Google's pretentious-sounding
"do no evil" dictum.
Even if it was a tempest in a teapot, management's
grudging response reminded me of Intel's
painful mismanagement of a famous
fiasco in 1994, when a college professor
discovered a floating point chip errata
in the Pentium. It took several days before
Intel realized customers were really outraged
by the company's dismissive silence and
finally took action.
But the damage was done, and Intel had to
work hard to repair its reputation.
More recently, Google fell into a tiff with
French critics of the company's library
digitization plans. The fear is that Google's
plan would further stamp Anglo domination
on global culture by giving short shrift
to non-English writing. This is a touchy
issue that comes during a delicate juncture
in Franco-American relations. The company
says Brin recently flew across the Atlantic
to meet with French officials. The issue
continues to simmer, but let's see how Google
handles the pressure.
From a reporter's vantage point, I can tell
you that Microsoft has forgotten more about
effective PR than Google's ever learned.
To wit: Early Thursday, about a hundred
or so reporters got bused in by Google for
a full-day briefing. I always treat these
orchestrated events with great suspicion,
but you have to turn up--just in case. Unfortunately,
the best I can say about this gabfest is
that lunch was swell.
This was a pure PR snow job, where the assembled
scribes were forced to suffer through a
mind-numbing procession of content-free
presentations for the better part of a day.
When it comes to explaining what's really
going on at Google, these guys have a lot
to learn. I'm not talking about the kissy
magazine cover stories PR regularly places.
I'm talking about getting the goods.
Microsoft is far savvier about brainwashing
the Fourth Estate. And their execs--at least
the smarter ones like Steve Ballmer--will
occasionally level with us about what's
not working.
Chalk it up then to growing pains. One Google
insider privately told me the higher-ups
don't believe in sharing information they
aren't required to by law (especially when
it comes to a snoopy press). They're wrong
about playing it so close to the vest, but
I understand why. Google's on a roll now,
but I guarantee that mind-set will get an
update after the company's first lousy quarterly
report hits the wire.
But these are mere quibbles, and people
will forgive Google a lot because they love
the story. There is a natural frisson surrounding
the company, an upstart that has come so
far, so fast. This is indeed an interesting
company--arguably the best story to come
out of Silicon Valley in the last decade.
How management performs will determine whether
Google remains Silicon Valley's best story
a decade hence.





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