QUOTE AND NEWS
Cloud Computing  8 hrs ago  Comment 
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MarketWatch  8 hrs ago  Comment 
Bill Hambrecht, Google’s auction banker, says that Facebook and CEO Mark Zuckerberg missed a valuable opportunity, writes John Shinal.
Wall Street Daily  8 hrs ago  Comment 
With every Friday comes a fresh batch of charts from Louis Basenese and another rundown of the week’s top technology trends from yours truly. Please be sure to cast your vote at the end, as this allows us to get to know our readers a bit...
Forbes  9 hrs ago  Comment 
The first real video from Google’s “Project Glass” is here. It’s a video taken by a Google employee doing flips on a trampoline and recording the whole thing with computer glasses. For what it’s worth, it does showcase the glasses’...
Forbes  9 hrs ago  Comment 
I know they will come. Everyday I see them.  Two, three, five sometimes even ten articles a day on the student loan crisis find their way into Google news and other feeds that I get on college-related topics. People have frequently asked me of...
Value Investing  10 hrs ago  Comment 
In the recently ended Google+ photographers Conference, Google’s project futuristic glasses made an appearance when a number of employees wore them. Google’s project glass prototype seems to be getting tested outside the confines of...
Value Investing  10 hrs ago  Comment 
As part of their transparency report, Google Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG) released some interesting information regarding many of the links on their website which direct users to sites that sell pirated Microsoft software.  Now Microsoft Corporation...
Market Intelligence Center  11 hrs ago  Comment 
Coming down the home stretch... Heading into the final hour the Dow is down 0.59%, the Nasdaq is down 0.12%, and the S&P 500 is down 0.17%. Stocks have drifted a bit lower since the open but volumes have been relatively light today ahead of the...
Market Intelligence Center  11 hrs ago  Comment 
Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) slid Friday in higher-than-normal volume, despite the long weekend. A June 650/655 Out of The Money Bear-Call Credit Spread looks like an attractive way to play GOOG today. This strategy aims for a return of 4.17% and GOOG...
Cloud Computing  May 25  Comment 
EMC has bought cloud storage start-up Syncplicity, which, as one might suspect from its name, does one-click file syncing and sharing as well as real-time backup. Users are supposed to be able to access, manage and share files across PCs, Macs,...




 

Google Inc (NASDAQ: GOOG), a global information technology leader, specializes in how people access and interact with information. Google provides the leading search engine along with many online services such as Gmail, Adsense, and Chrome. In fiscal year 2010, Google reported $29.3 billion of revenues and $8.5 billion of net income. Google operates in over 50 countries with unique domain names for each country. Internet advertising is the fastest growing segment of the advertising market, but still only represents 8% of total U.S. advertising dollars -- suggesting considerable room for further growth. To tap these opportunities, Google has used the profits from its paid search business to support innovative projects such as Google Editions and the Android Market.

Business Overview

Google’s search tools allow users to efficiently search through vast amounts of web-based information, organizing and delivering results based on relevance. It also has a long and growing list of products in many other areas of computer applications. Consumer usage of its products is free, financed through advertising (96% of 2010 Revenues) and licensing (3% of 2010 Revenues) sales.

Co-founders Larry Page and Sergei Brin created Google's core PageRank technology to archive and organize Internet webpages and develop a searchable database. The basic tenet of PageRank is that when one website links to another, the first website is endorsing the second. Pages are then "ranked" according to the ecosystem of all web pages archived by Google. While the company has since utilized numerous other ranking systems, PageRank still remains a central technology. Google also creates search products for photos, videos, and specific websites types such as blogs. Google does not charge consumers for its search capabilities, receiving most of its revenue from advertising and a small portion from licensing its search technologies to enterprise companies.

Trends and Forces

Google's Advertising-Based Business Model is Susceptible to Economic Cycles

Advertising is a major revenue driver for Google, with 96% of its revenue coming from advertising. This dependence is a concern in a down economy since advertising is generally the first source of cost-cutting for companies[1]. Google has seen an increase in the number of paid clicks generated by an increase in aggregate traffic and the continued global expansion of their products, advertiser base and user base. The decrease in the average cost-per-click paid by advertisers was primarily the result of the strengthening of the U.S. dollar relative to foreign currencies.[2]

Google's Free, Advertising-Supported Offerings Prove Highly Disruptive

Google has completely transformed the world of advertising in its efforts to connect users to information. Its free offerings have been highly disruptive to well-rooted industries, provoking frequent legal conflict. Viacom is seeking damages in excess of $1 billion from the posting and distribution of copyrighted materials on YouTube. With the 2004 launch of Google Book Search, authors and publishing houses reacted to the millions of copyrighted books being downloaded for free. The Authors and the Association of American Publishers sued Google for copyright infringement in 2005. Through a settlement, Google continues to make books digitally available, to the chagrin of publishers and book retailers such as Amazon. With the launch of Google Earth, the appeal of America Online's MapQuest basically disappeared overnight. Google's Android-based smartphones, equipped with free GPS navigation services, have upended the need for TomTom, which comes at a charge to consumers. Google's Gmail, Google Apps, and Chrome also competes directly with Microsoft's Hotmail, Office Suite, and Internet Explorer respectively[3].

Competition

Although Google in its broadest perception has gained an unparalleled marketplace acceptance, in the narrower search market its competitors are Yahoo! (YHOO) and Microsoft (MSFT), which is currently expanding into the online search and advertising business within the US and Baidu.com (BIDU) in China. Yahoo, founded four years before Google, was historically the leading online search site, but in January 2009, Google made headlines by overtaking Yahoo in unique users per month. Relative to Yahoo!--and almost any company--Google's expenses are quite low. The expense breakdown suggests different priorities for the two companies: Google's highest cost sector is product development, at 9%, while Yahoo! allocated 20% of revenues for sales. And while Google spreads its costs evenly among the three principle areas, Yahoo!'s expenses are clearly concentrated in sales, with development and administration trailing far behind.

Because Microsoft has many sources of revenue beyond advertising, it is difficult to compare it in more detail to Google and Yahoo!.

With a plethora of social networking websites and platforms making their way onto the internet, Google faces stiff competition from websites such as Facebook, Twitter, Groupon and LinkedIn.

Google's Android smartphone operation system is also in direct competition with Apple (AAPL) , Microsoft (MSFT) and Research in Motion (RIMM) in the fast-moving, competitive smartphone market.

As Google expands into e-commerce and Local services using its Google Offers, Checkout, and Wallet , it is also encroaching on an estalished player in Groupon as well as Facebook's Deals.

Sources

  1. GOOG 2008 10-K pg. 19  
  2. GOOG 2009 10-Q1 pg. 27  

46. Android GPS tracking 47. The Android Phone

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