Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Google Scenarios

Greg has done a lot of scenario building based on scanning.

However not letting any details get in the way I'll take a crazy stab at scenarios. Didn't look at 'strategic gap' (Ansoff) or market growth rates specifically.

Optimistic scenario: Positive marketing environment and transition to on-line spend grows internet advertising market. Google diversifies into other media, becoming a single source supplier for many customers. Development of web-platforms e.g. the Chrome browser, Gears, Andriod lead to ubiquity of the web and in particular web-search. Google's applications successfully become content drivers adding to conversion into clicks. Applications become carriers for Google's advertising and thereby capture a large proportion of software spend. Google provides an end-to-end solution for marketing, tying themselves into marketing supply chains. Google also manages to provide a purchasing directory, thereby tying themselves into consumers supply chains.

Pessimistic scenario: Google gets surpassed by searchme.com with advertising conversions falling to negligible levels (20% of existing?). Worldwide economy falters with marketing spend fulling dramatically in key Google markets, e.g. U.S.. Internet media consolidates into a model more resembling a traditional publishing model with a few significant players - not Google. Hubris at Google results in them spending to 'invent their way out of trouble' compounding the liabilities that expensive fixed-cost platforms have become. Specialist providers have picked of effective platforms such as YouTube, which was never quite consolidated into a coherent part of the Google organisation. Google is forced to charge $25 a year for gmail, obtain revenue through ever more detailed profiles and on-sell 'anonymised' content profiles to Sharman Networks and Mark Zukerberg which coupled with rising unreliability results in mass defection and the sale of the Google brand for $1 to Murdoch.

Gmail-Picassa-Docs etc/storage options:

10GB - $US20/yr | 40GB - $US75/yr | 150Gb - $US250/yr | 400Gb - $US500/yr

Neutral scenario:

These are the revenue growth figures from the Google 2007 Annual report:

Revenue

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

Y/Y Growth rate

409.00%

234.00%

118.00%

92.00%

73.00%

56.00%

Clearly the rate of growth is decreasing. As Hamel says – rapid growth leads more quickly to constraints to growth.

I was looking in the y/y growth rate crystal ball. Our hypothesis is that the growth rate needs to be high so as justify share price (P/E 21 in this financial market), to justify expectations and offset a high rate growth rate in costs (69%, 2007). Admittedly the first line starts at a high 50%. Data came from Google investor site.

I can't imagine the 2008 annual growth being too much higher than the Q2 growth rate of 39% given global economics. Growth rates should be able to be compared quarterly, ignoring seasonal factors. Open office 'power regression' (guess that is the -1.19 bit) give me an equation f(x) = 4.56x^-1.19 and an r value of 98 as the closest fit to these numbers. Equation gives 45% growth for 2008, 38% for 2009 and 20% for 2014.



If we took the negative model and mapped linear, Google would be negative in 2007 (r = 0.77).

For costs, I could not get a good model, the 2003 figure probably should be discarded. In 2005,2006, 2007 the rate of growth actually increased to sit at approximately 70%. This is higher than the growth in revenue at 56%


Divergent:
a) Google finds the long-lost patent for the hyperlink and purchases it. It uses this patent and address translation software to become the middle-man in all accesses to internet resources.
b) Big media and authoritarian regimes limit access to freely available sources. The only access is through media company or national portals.

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Monday, October 6, 2008

Google Sites Supporting Google AdSense

Google Sites Supporting Google AdSense

Analysis by product makes it seem a myth. The 70-20-10 rule mentioned in the Google annual report that is. Maybe it is different by expense?

"We are still keeping to our long-standing plan of devoting 70% of our resources to search and advertising. We debate where we should classify our Apps (Gmail, Docs, etc) products but they
currently fall into the 20% of resources we devote to related businesses. We use the remaining 10% of our resources on areas that are farther afield but have huge potential, such as Andriod."


The report says 'search and advertising' but most of the search applications don't have any advertising and there is not much revenue from search. I can only see the main search engine and gmail with advertising. The rest nothing...

Android could push mobile use and lead to more visitors, visiting the main search engine site more often and consuming the advertising - the mobile version does have the advertising? The book search does not currently have advertising and as such does not fit into my view of the current e-business model at all.

I started doing the whole-product diagram. I knew of this from Moore although it is similar to the
Kotler 'Three Layer Product Model'. I ended up with 4 as I had 'enablers' which are not actual features but are important to Google. Also, maybe, I didn't study it hard enough. Most of the products on the Google product list I didn't find a spot for.

This has thrown the idea that everything fitted nicely together around advertising (the 70) into disarray. Help - how does it all fit together?

Full Size


Google Product descriptions















Product URLAdvertising Competitors Description Price Competitive play business case
Alerts No
compliments search
Blog search
No




book search
No reuters, proquest, amazon

compliments search
catalogs
Yes – but free salmat au – lasoo.com.au shopping catalogue site
compliments search
custom search engine
No
search proliferation


desktop
No




directory
No




earth
No




finance
No




gears
No




images
No




language tools






maps






personalised search






product search






scholar






sketchup






toolbar




Positions the search engine countering owners of applications control
web accelerator






web search






















Ads






adsense






adwords






analytics














Applications






apps
Yes – gmail


Entry + education + business + partner (portals) editions
blogger
No – user option through adwords


Develop on-line communication – potentially replace office documents
calendar
No


Develop on-line practise
checkout
No PayPal, card providers, bpay (Aus), Western Union

Payments play? Become an e-commerce player
code




Potential for advertising. Support software development . Potential access to software creators. Perhaps an 'app-store' concept will develop?
Docs & spreadsheets
No


Develop the habit of using web-applications? Demonstration?
gmail
Yes – gmail

$USD20/yr = 10Gb, $50/yr/account professional

groups
No – only google products


?? - brand?
labs




brand/innovation. Improvements to applications
news
No




notebook






orkut
No facebook

Facebook has adverts, sells stakes in business to content sharing partners
pack




Desktop version of picassa
picasa
No




picasa web albums
No

Storage

reader






talk






translate




Value-add to search
video






webmaster tools






youtube
No – only google products


Value-add to search
















Enterprise






earth for enterprise/google pro






maps for enterprise






Mini






Search appliance






sketchup pro














Mobile






Mobile






dodgeball








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