Friday, May 25, 2007

Google on the block

This is in response to Google does it again...

Ok, ok, let me tonic down my gin....

Don't get me wrong... My problem with Google is what I call the Uninformed Customer model.

- their business model involves getting as many users as possible and then sell co-lateral products (adwords) - network effects business model...
- as I've posted earlier (see The Money Way and About Pay-per-Click and Customer Acquisition Cost), a user having a trust relationship with Google might get disappointed by the website / products Google advertises through adwords. This is why Google needs an always increasing user-base to account for the apathy of old users that already clicked the ads, and now ignore them. - they fail to create a true user loyalty

Also, as I was lately talking with my friend Jonathan Belisle, users become by nature nomadic and unloyal (see also The age of procrastination, a stupid key and the revenge of the users), especially when they perceive the provider as an unethical one... This is where the problem occurs.

1. Google starts to be perceived as a corporation with unethical behaviour
2. The model of uninformed user lowers its user-base confidence
3. The eternal-beta model insures that the products will always be choppy. Their goal is not to create state-of-the-art products but to get as many users with as many freebies as possible.

So when users don't trust you and your products (even though they are amazingly cool and practical) and when users are known to migrate to the next best thing what is there to conclude....?

But still. As Google needs the world, the world needs Google too.

Google is behind the what i call the Robin Hood Business Model (or the network effects :). And is responsible for opening new possibilities in the business world and helping create a more affordable information and technological society.

And I have confidence in Google... they are the good guys, they are not evil!

But for how long...
Monopoly brings abuse and power corrupts...

Here is another example: EU Probes Google on Data Protection ("The search engine says it collects data in order to protect against hackers, but is retaining it for up to two years legal?") ...

-- Octavian Mihai

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