PR 101- Lesson 13 – How Google is taking over the Internet (why that’s not a bad thing)
Jeff Cole | June 1, 2009On May 28th, Google unveiled what it is billing as “the email of the future.”
Named Google Wave, the experimental project is the result of a multi-year initiative to reinvent digital communication by blending e-mail, instant messaging, and content sharing into something resembling a cross between Twitter, Facebook, and a standard email platform, according to Online Media Daily.
Google Wave, which is expected to be released later this year, will “combine conversation-type communication and collaboration-type communication,” Lars Rasmussen, a software engineering manager at Google and the project’s co-founder said, Online Media Daily also reported.
What does this mean to those of us who use social media for marketing and public relations? It means it will be almost impossible to run an effective social media campaign without using Google applications. Merging Google Wave with Google Friend Connect means the “search engine” will become the colossus that will stand astride the web.
The core of social media is building communities. Think of Google as the place that provides all of the tools one needs to build those communities. I know of only one other place that provides as comprehensive a toolbox as Google does. It’s called Apple. Apple develops hardware and software for that hardware. Google is concerned with Internet applications. The two companies offerings dovetail quite nicely,
And Google and Apple are apparently working very closely together. One of Google’s new applications is called IGoogle. Coincidence, I think not. IGoogle aggregates such things as Google Latitude (which tells your contacts where you are), local weather forecasts, Gmail, sports scores, local events and a host of other information.
I first learned about Google approximately 10 years ago. A colleague at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel told me about this new search engine that was better than Yahoo. She said it was faster, simpler and wasn’t cluttered with ads. I tried it and I liked it. At the time, I was one of the only people I knew who was using it. When I told people what search engine I was using, they laughed at the name. Now, Google dominates the Web.
Google is now so ubiquitous that the world “Google” has become a synonym for search. Consider these statistics for 2008:
Search Engine Share of Searches
Google 59.3 percent
Yahoo 16.9 percent
MSN 13.3 percent
AOL 4.1 percent
Source: http://www.ahfx.net/weblog/135
As I have already said, Google is now far more than just a search engine. It is has made itself an essential part of working on the web.
Let’s look at some of its other applications:
- Google Friend Connect. Look at the right hand side of this blog. You will see a widget marked Google Friend Connect. Social media used to a fragmented experience. Some people were on Facebook, some were on Twitter, others used MySpace. What Google Friend Connect does is allow the linking of social media sites. As social media expert Simon U. Ford explains, Google Friend Connect is the pipeline running the under the web.
- Google Mail, or Gmail, provides email, instant messaging, and voice and video communication without launching a separate application. It is kind of a one-stop-shop for instant communication.
- Google Docs, which is essentially an on-line office application. Google Docs supports .doc, .xls, .csv, .ppt, .txt, .html, .pdf and other formats. What it means is anyone care share and edit documents, spreadsheets, web pages, etc. in real time. There is no need to email anything back and forth.
- Google sites allow the construction of rich websites. It can be used for something as complex as a company intranet or as simple as a family web page.
There are many other applications Google provides. As I already said, what Google has done is make it easier than ever to set up a social media campaign.
Let’s say you have launched a new product. Your customers like it. You create a Google site for those customers to go to discuss the product. You hook in Google Friend Connect to that site. Using Google’s blog app, you post a blog on that site where you discuss the product and give customers an opportunity to comment.
Some of the customers can record a video on YouTube about how much they like the product. Say link to that video on Facebook. Using Google Friend Connect, they become a fan of your site. Using the same app, they can link that Facebook video into the website in a seamless way.
And from the website, again using Google Friend Connect, the video can be linked to Digg, Plaxo, Technorati and a plethora of other sites. All of sudden, the potential exists for your video to be seen, and your blog to be read, by millions of people. And not to sound too much like a salesman, but Google made it all possible.
Will something else come along and knock Google off its pedestal? Who knows? All I know right now is that if you are going to run an effective social media campaign, you are going to need Google.
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My background: I worked as a reporter for 25 years in central Illinois, upstate New York, suburban Detroit and Milwaukee. I now help clients with marketing communications through my company – JJC Communications LLC. If you want to know more about my company, and myself, click the link. It’s a cliché, but it’s true for me: no job is too big, no job is too small. I have worked with companies on the Fortune 500 list and I have worked with companies that have one employee. The service I provide is the same for all.
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