A co-worker of mine at Tucows, Adam, & I had a discussion about
Google. Adam writes the secret snowboarding blog, so secret that
I shall link to it here.
Adam knows alot about SEO and recommended that if I was interested in
it, he really recommended John Batelle's book 'The Search' and I just finished it.
Batelle's book is excellent and I highly recommend it as well. It
was interesting to read the history of web page search, especially
the chapters on DEC and AltaVista. Batelle is careful to stress
that his book is not about 'Google' though it would be hard to tell
that
since the publisher decided to use Google brand colours on the book
jacket (and I assume added the de-facto business book marketing '[...]
changed the rules of business'. The book is not too business-y
and not too technical so anyone interested in Google would enjoy it.
Batelle believes that the concept of 'search' and the
fact that more and more content is becoming digital is the key factor
that is changing our society. And Google is central to
that.
What struck me as I read the book was that I realized that in all the
blogs and articles I had read about Google over the past year, Google
is really taking on many faces. To some Google is becoming a
'software' company ready to displace Microsoft. To others Google
is a centre of innovation and 'super smart' (Phd.) people who will
change our world for the better. While to others Google provides
the most successful Pay Per Click (PPC) advertising model which has
made domain names hot property again.
That PPC model is what allows Google to be so many things to so many
people. PPC has brought in incredible amounts of cash. And
cash is time. This week Eric Schmidt made a couple of statements
publicly about Google. He said that more competition will result
in higher prices and that Google appears to be benefitting from a
'limitless growth model'. Both of these statements can be argued
to be true. In theory, Google does have 'limitless growth model'
but how will that work out in practice? Well, you need alot of
people searching, you need more and more people searching. You
need people searching more often.
But when I think about this and all that I read about Google, I
feel
like its become almost a symbol or hope for the way we want the web to
go. Fortunately, in software a great vision can be shaped into
reality. This is both the advantage and downfall of many a CEO in
software. Is Google going to become the Google of our dreams?
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Tuesday, May 16
by
Siobhan McLaughlin
on Tue 16 May 2006 11:33 AM EDT
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