Monday, January 19, 2009

How do you Google?

google-beta It’s not news to suggest that Google has become pretty ubiquitous. For an ever increasing segment of the population, the internet starts on the Google homepage every time they fire up a browser. I would be very surprised if almost every web user in North America or Europe didn’t use Google for at least something.

But everyone uses Google differently. My homepage on both my work laptop and my home network is iGoogle. Where front and center is the pretty cool Google Twitter Gadget. On my work computer I also have a tab for Traffic and Maps on my iGoogle to help me plan the drive home. So I hit 3 features of Google, Search, Maps and a Gadget from Labs, every time I hit the internet. I also have a Gmail tab on my iGoogle, but I rarely use it.

If I’m browsing for fun, almost inevitably, the next thing I do is to pull up my RSS aggregator, Google Reader. I’ve tried a number of different aggregators and readers in the past, but Google Reader is the only one that I have stuck with. I probably have 60-70 feeds in my Reader, 30-40 of which are active.

google_reader
I also typically pull up my Gmail account, but I find myself using that less and less to read or compose emails, since I typically do that on the Blackberry, I use Gmail mostly for Gtalk if I want to chat or to access “follow up required” type of emails, usually reminders to pay a bill or buy a ticket or something.

Finally, three or four times a week I stop by Google docs to check on community docs, update some of my budget spreadsheets or upload some reports that some of the services I subscribe to generate.

I feel like my usuage is pretty standard, so that was why this article by Techcrunch interested me so much. It was about the top domains (a relative proxy for products) of the various Google domains (as measured by Quantcast) Here was the list.

1. Google Search
2. Google Maps
3. Google Image Search
4. Gmail
5. Google Book Search
6. Google News
7. Google Video Search
8. Picasa
9. Google Earth
10. Google Groups

The fact that Google search is #1 is no surprise. But what did surprised me was that my usage of Google doesn’t really correspond to what is popular. Reader and Docs don’t even make the list, I’ve never used Groups (and was barely aware that it existed), Picasa, Video Search (I assume this is different than Youtube?), I don’t really use News or Book Search (and I’m not even sure what that is).

What is clear, is that Google’s power (as measured by Traffic) is still in its search. This to me is bound to change. Search is great, but I can’t remember the last time that I really had an opinion about a search engine, or the last time I felt really a lot of value-add input came from my engine. I use Google to search , but almost as a after thought. What I VALUE from Google is their mail, the storage they provide, the ease and convenience of sharing documents, maps to help me get home and the service they provide in aggregating all the sites I read and follow.

I might be wrong, but I don’t think that Google’s strength and power lie in growing search, but in cranking out quality products like Reader and Gmail and quickly killing distracting and depreciative products like Orkut (although I hear that is big in Brazil, or is that Friendster? Who cares?) and Google Video.

But I could be wrong, clearly more people touch Google via search than through reader.

How do you Google? Let us know.

6 comments:

  1. I really enjoyed this post Andy. I use to use iGoogle everyday but I've now switched to pretty much keeping Gmail open all day long. My Gmail has a twitter gadget, my gchat (which includes AIM chat), my to do list and my calendar. I also use Google Reader everyday to keep track of 126 websites. I really try to keep a clean inbox in Gmail and my Google Reader list marked as read.

    Other than those 2 Google products, I usually perform multiple Google searches a day.

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  2. I think as our generation moved into the work world we became disconnected from our college email. We flocked like drones to gmail becuase that was what our friend next to us was doing. It was a no brainer. Not to mention most companies block the use of AIM (local client) so to just have a webpage open (gmail) and be able to chat within the site without downloading anything was crucial to their sucess. Overall I think they provide a great service, and fill a void that we were looking for. We were also the first people to use their service, and they have done a great job of adjusting to what we want. Most recently with the themes, even though I think they were a little late to catch on. Why does everyone love mozilla?? Customizable which is what google should have been doing over a year ago. Oh well they joined the party now.

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  3. I hear what you are saying about customization, and I agree with you to a certain extent. But one of the reasons that Google won the search wars I think was how clean and simple they have kept their UI. That basic homepage is about as clean and slick as it gets. But I agree with you that now that they've are doing a great job responding to the ever growing demand for User-Driven customization.

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  4. Keeping the Reader marked as read is a tough battle for me. I always tell myself that I'm coming back to the stuff I skip over, but then I never do. It's kinda like email, once you get behind, you either need to declare bankrupcy or you'll never get out from underneath the pile.

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  5. Jefferies and Co do not agree with my assessment of Google's Search focus as being short-sighted. They view Search as core business and critical to Google's success. This is a quote from a recent research report they released:

    "Positive ad-coverage and acceleration in paid clicks growth in
    Oct/Nov/Dec. give us more confidence in Google's ability to meet our
    and consensus 4Q estimates despite the severe ad climate. We reiterate
    our Buy based on ad budget migration to Search, Google's relatively
    resilient model and its newfound cost discipline.

    comScore released ad-coverage data for December after market close
    yesterday, which we use to derive Y/Y paid clicks growth."

    I understand what Jefferies is saying, but I stand firm that search is a good core business, but not where Google should hang its hat as the company's future.

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  6. Another take, more in line with the above post, From SAI http://www.alleyinsider.com/2009/1/google-stock...

    "Google is still a one-product company, and the product is coming to the end of its adoption cycle. For two years now, Google has been trying to develop the product that will pick up where search leaves off (the Office to Google's search-business Windows). So far, it has failed. Mobile won't do it. Video won't do it. Display won't do it (unless the company deigns to put display ads on its own site). Google may develop a big companion product eventually, but, as yet, it hasn't. Bulls love to say "buy Google because it controls the search market." Controlling markets doesn't make stocks go up."

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