Acquired - Alphabet Inc.
Episode Date: August 26, 2025In its first six years from 1998 to 2004, Google built one of the greatest products of all time (and certainly the greatest business of all time) with Search. Then in its next six years from ...2005 to 2011, Google built seven (!) more billion+ user products: Gmail, Maps, Drive and Docs, YouTube, Chrome, Android, and Photos — all either started from scratch internally or acquired as startups that were still in their infancy. This six-year period of wild innovation STILL stands unmatched in technology history… no other tech company counts more than four billion+ user products in its portfolio total. And of course, this “Google 2.0” era culminated in the transformation of the very company itself into Alphabet.So the question we answer today is… how did they do it?? And why? What was the strategy that led a once “pure play” search company into such far flung fields as email, mapping, funny cat videos and operating systems? We unpack the brilliant (and sometimes accidental) strategies behind each product, the simultaneous three-front war Google fought against Microsoft, Apple, and Facebook, and the spectacular failure of Google Plus that nearly destroyed the company's culture — before ultimately setting the stage for both Alphabet and the AI revolution to come.Sponsors:Many thanks to our fantastic Summer ‘25 Season partners:J.P. Morgan PaymentsAnthropicStatsigVercelLinks:Sign up for email updates and vote on Fall Season episodes!Jeff Dean and Sanjay Ghemawat New Yorker articleEric Schmidt on stage at the iPhone keynote (!)Bill Gurley’s classic “Less than Free” Android postOur recent ACQ2 episode with Bret Taylor and Clay BavorWorldly Partners’ Multi-Decade Alphabet StudyEpisode sourcesCarve Outs:Bluey x Camp in NYCSteam Deck vs Switch 2 (Part 2)ClaudeSony RX100 VIICarissimi clothingMore Acquired:Get email updates and vote on Fall Season episodes!Join the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Check out the latest swag in the ACQ Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Are you intentionally wearing a black turtle neck for this one?
No.
It is actually going to be one of my carve-outs, though.
Yeah, ha, ha, amazing.
You think I dress up like Steve Jobs for a Google episode?
Well, I thought because of the war between Android and...
I walk in and there's this like smirk on your face.
All right, let's do it.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you?
You, is it you, sit me down, say it straight, another story on the way you've got the truth.
Welcome to the summer 2025 season of Acquired, the podcast about great companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
In the late 1990s, Google built the best search engine for the rapidly growing internet.
With a breakthrough search algorithm, low-cost servers based on commodity hardware, and the best business model of all time,
search ads, they turned that search engine into a cash gushing business and took it public in 2004.
But then, curiously, they started doing some things that weren't related to search.
They launched a breakthrough email service in your browser with Gmail, maps that were far
superior to the current state of the art, docks and spreadsheets with real-time collaboration
for the first time. Of course, YouTube, then Android, and their own web browser with Chrome.
Astonishingly, today, Google has 15 products with over half a billion users.
Seven of those have over 2 billion users.
David, that is over 25% of humans use seven of Google's products.
Just unreal.
Can't wait to tell all of these stories today.
Yes.
And they've also launched some colossal failures.
Google Plus to try to compete with Facebook, Google Wave, Buzz, and about half a dozen messaging
apps. I don't know, maybe a dozen messaging apps over the years. Hot air balloons to provide
wireless internet. And of course... Oh, man, I forgot about the hot air balloons. Google Glass.
Can't forget about that one, unfortunately. So why did they do all this? And as a business,
Google was and still is the company that makes the vast majority of their money from ads on search
results on the web. So today, we tell the story of Google as the innovation factory of the 2000s.
their reorganization into the parent company Alphabet
and how all these different products
cleverly serve different business purposes
and also how it feeds into Google's original core mission
to organize the world's information
and we'll end this episode's story right at the dawn of the AI era.
Oh, you're giving away the end.
Oh, spoilers. Sorry.
So is Google a search engine?
Is it the platform company of the web era
or is it an incubator that just happens to have struck
gold with search and perhaps
AI. Today, we
dive in. Whop. The listeners,
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and the whole acquired community, acquired.fm slash slack.
Before we dive in, we want to briefly thank our presenting partner, J.P. Morgan Payments.
Yes, just like how we say every company has a story.
Every company's story is powered by payments,
and JPMorgan Payments is a part of so many of their journeys from Cid to IPO and beyond.
So with that, this show is not investment advice.
David and I may have investments in the companies we discuss,
and this show is for informational and entertainment purposes only.
David, where are we starting this alphabet story?
Oh, I have a very, very fun beginning for you, Ben.
I want to start with a quote from Russ Hanneman.
The fictional character?
Silicon Valley HBO show.
Oh, yeah, from the TV show.
Awesome.
And the quote is, if you show revenue, people will ask how much, and it will never be enough.
The company that was the 100-Xer, the 1,000-Xer is suddenly the 2x dog.
But if you have no revenue, you can say you're pre-revenue.
You're a potential pure play.
It's not about how much you earn.
It's about what you're worth and who's worth.
The most, companies that lose money.
Immortal words of wisdom for the technology world.
God, that show was so good.
Why do I bring this up?
Why do I start here?
Why are you talking about this?
Google is a cash gushing machine.
Revenue is obviously not the problem for Google.
But what was the problem in 2004, 2004,
2005, 2006, was being viewed as, in Russ's terms, pure play.
When Google went public in fall of 2004, the stock shot up, basically doubled in two months.
Wall Street loved Google.
AdWords, the search business model, everybody had to own shares.
Google had cracked the code on monetizing the internet.
The more people use the internet, the more they search, the more they search, the more money Google makes.
Simple, easy, pure play.
You might say.
Yep.
That is until Google announced fourth quarter 2005 earnings.
Full year 2005 revenue, $6.1 billion.
That's almost double the 3.1 that it was in 2004, the first year went public.
But earnings are flat.
Profitability is down.
Google's now investing in all these new products and services, Gmail, Maps, the forthcoming Google Docs,
later this year in 2006
would buy YouTube for $1.6 billion.
Wall Street hates this, hates it.
This is a huge amount of their cash.
They're putting back on the table
and betting for the future.
So this is January 2006.
The stock falls 27%.
Wall Street's like, God, these guys,
what are they doing? They're messing it up.
Stephen Levy writes in The Plex
that the perception of Google's
Ventures Beyond Search at the time
was that the company was tossing ball
into the air like a drunken juggler. They were a pure play in investors' eyes, and now they're
messing it up. They're adding all this other stuff. They don't want the other stuff. Yeah.
So then, Ben, as you teed up in the intro, the question is, why did they do all this? And I think
the way to answer it is to start and just tell the stories of all the individual products.
Let's do it. Strap in. I will say, David, doing the research took me way back to early acquired
grading acquisitions. This is the cornucopia of hits of iconic product launches in tech history.
So the first, and probably the most important here, because it sets the stage for everything else.
The first major non-search product was on April 1st, April Fool's Day, 2004, Gmail.
The most famous, infamous, non-joke April Fool's Day announcement of all time.
Yes.
But it sure sounded like a joke.
Here's the announcement in 2004.
Entirely web-based email in your browser.
You can log in and access it.
Anywhere. On any device, Google search is built in. You don't need to spend all this time sorting your mail into folders anymore. And one gigabyte of storage free. No need to delete your mail. No need to clean up your inbox. No need to do anything ever. And the whole thing is free. Yep. Of course this sounds like a joke. This is too good to be true.
The universe at the time is Microsoft sells sort of enterprise grade mail for a lot of money,
or there's all these free web-based services popping up, like Hot Mail that Microsoft would end up buying,
and Yahoo Mail and AOL. You get like five megabytes of storage.
Yeah, not even. At the time, Hot Mail, which, as you said, Microsoft Owens, had two megabytes of free storage.
And Yahoo Mail had four megabytes. There's another great story in theplex that Stephen Levy has.
He's interviewing Bill Gates.
at the Newsweek headquarters office in New York shortly after Gmail comes out. And they started
talking about Gmail. And Bill can't believe it. He's like offended by Gmail because he thinks
that giving people all this storage is just wasteful. You're doing email wrong. It's morally
repugnant to leave all of this email sitting on the servers. I was thinking about it. Until
Gmail, the paradigm for email, people treated it like regular fitness.
physical mail. You sort it, you file away the important stuff, you throw out the pieces you don't need anymore. I mean, even freaking Bill Gates operates this way. Yes. So Gmail, this is radical. This is a radical notion of how email should work. And it was also correct. I mean, if you sat and you thought about it in, say, 2001 or so, when Gmail starts getting worked on within Google, and you thought about the combination of the growth of the internet, which obviously Google has a front row seat too. And
Moore's law, you would logically come to this conclusion that the cost of sending and storing
and searching email would asymptotically go to zero. And thus, as that happened, a whole lot more
email was going to be sent in the world. Yep. So can I tell you my understanding of where this
story starts in 1996? Oh, I was going to go back to 99, but yeah, go for it. All right. So I know
you're about to bring up the name Paul Bukite. Is that right? Of course. Yeah. So Paul
Paul was kind enough to speak with me before recording this episode, Paul famously, the inventor of Gmail.
In 1996, Paul was a student at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, which you may also know this, David, famously was one of the...
Ohio Strong.
Yes, the first campuses in the nation to have broadband internet in the dorms and all over campus.
Oh, okay, I do about the Paul fascination with webmail starting in college, but I didn't realize the Case Western had broadband.
So this is why, when you're living in the universe of broadband everywhere, he was living like 15 years in the future temporarily for four years in college.
Yeah, 1996.
Yes.
So he realizes email is kind of a bummer if it's a thing that you download and lives on your computer.
The information should just exist at my fingertips all the time.
Bits are becoming free to move around.
So he kind of gets obsessed with this idea in college that email should exist on the web in a browser without ever having to download it.
And he builds a prototype for web mail when he's in college.
Wow.
In 2001, famously pre-IPO at Google, Larry Page feels like Google is moving a little bit too slow and gets rid of all engineering managers.
So Larry and Wayne Rosen, who is leading engineer and go and meet with each.
engineer individually to talk about ideas that they could work on. This tells you so much about
Googliness, but it also tells you a lot about the caliber of the engineers they were hiring
at the time, where they would just approach them and say, what ideas are you thinking about?
Here's some ideas we have. Can you just full stack own this product entirely yourself?
And so in Paul's meeting, they knew about his previous interest in email and web-based mail,
and they sort of float this amorphous idea to him, and that's where it comes from.
Oh, so Larry and Wayne suggested it to him. Interesting.
Okay, so here's some other stuff that Paul said.
So part of the motivation was that they were looking to make something that would make Google stickier.
So you'd have sort of this ongoing relationship for if there was a next Google after Google, there was some reason why you would still have a relationship.
Which obviously, you know, Yahoo would have for many, many years, even though there was a next Yahoo after Yahoo and Google.
We still get emails from people with Yahoo mails.
Do you know how Paul found out about Google in 1989?
Ooh, no.
Slash dot.
Really?
That's awesome.
And then he sends an email to jobs at Google.com.
Unbelievable.
Fitting that he gets hired with an email.
Hey, oh.
Okay.
So, 2001, Paul gets to work with encouragement from Larry and Wynn.
Do you know what the original seed of the code is?
Oh, no, go for it.
Google had just bought a company called Deja News, their first acquisition.
It was the corpus of
all the old Usenet posts.
Oh, yeah, and then this becomes Google Groups, right?
That's exactly right.
Yeah, and Paul's working on that.
And part of that was a feature to do real-time indexing of all the posts
that would allow you to search the whole corpus.
So Paul just applies that to his own personal inbox.
The first instantiation of this is just a search box to search his personal Unix mail
directory as if it is the old Usenet posts that they had just bought.
That's the first version of Gmail.
Amazing.
As he's building on that, though, obviously, like, the first thing he needs is a web front, an interface.
Okay, hot mail's out there, Yahoo Mail's out there, webmail's out there.
It sucks.
It sucks for a lot of reasons.
There's got to be a way to make it better, make it more performance and better to use as a web page.
And so he's playing around with JavaScript and what he can do with JavaScript to make this
application, this web application of email better.
The history of JavaScript is fascinating.
Brendan Ike created it at Netscape back in 1995.
We did a whole episode with Brendan years ago about this.
The idea behind JavaScript was to include a programming language as part of web browsers
so that people could make dynamic web pages instead of just static HTML documents.
The problem was it was kind of this casualty of the browser wars with Microsoft
and Internet Explorer and everything that killed Netscape.
And so up until this time, kind of 2001,
JavaScript existed, but like it wasn't super popular.
It wasn't very powerful.
You could do weird stuff like animate something on the page,
but I would describe it as toy-like and not a real programming language, for sure.
Yep.
And for what the web was up until that point in time, you didn't really need it.
Static webpages are kind of fine for most of what's happened.
I mean, even Google.com was static.
You type of search into the search box,
Google servers process the query,
and they send you a whole new static web page with the results.
But you'd imagine for doing something like email,
on the web or any application on the web,
you don't want the site to reload every time you open a new email
or you create a draft or you move something around in folders.
You might want to move from a website to a world of web applications.
Yeah.
But this is how Hotmail and Yahoo Mail worked.
Every time you took an action, it reloaded the page.
And so they were super slow.
Yes.
And so Paul's like, maybe I can use JavaScript to make this better.
He's working on it.
And he discovers a little-known feature of JavaScript called the XML-HTTP
request, which lets a web page fetch automatically new XML data from a server without
reloading the page.
I'm paul's like, oh my God, this is gold.
And this is the birth of Ajax, asynchronous, JavaScript, and XML.
So, David, I assumed you were going to go here.
I thought that you get it all laid up.
You've been letting me go.
You've just been feeding me your rope the whole time.
You're trying to tell me that Gmail is the first Ajax application?
Well, the first widely adopted around the world.
That's fair to say.
That sort of set the bar for what dynamic web2.0 you might say websites could be.
Yes.
The origin of the XML HTTP request is a part of Internet Explorer,
first implemented by Microsoft,
and used in this part of Outlook called Outlook Web Access.
I think I did know this.
When I worked for my high school, I could log in on any computer into my Outlook through their web access.
And that thing used Ajax.
And I think it only worked in Internet Explorer.
So that is the origin of why this API exists in the first place.
Ironically, for another mail client.
Oh, not just for another mail client.
It's so deeply ironic that this originated for a Microsoft mail client.
Yes.
We're going to get deep into that in just a minute here.
Yes.
So, I mean, when Paul discovers this, this is almost like Google search all over again when people realize what you can do to create something that looks and feels and has all the functionality of a application that heretofore would have been a program that you installed on your personal computer.
A dot EXC or a dot app on your Mac.
That maybe you downloaded from the internet, but more likely you went to a retail shop like Comp USA or something.
installed on your computer. You can now just do this in a web browser? This is incredible.
The web is the platform in the future. Yep. So Paul builds the prototype, shows it to Larry and
Sergey. They're super jazzed. So supposedly Larry and Sergey become the first beta users of Gmail.
They are the seed Gmail users, and they start using it exclusively as their mail service
within Google. And then by the time it launches publicly, all of Google is on Gmail.
and using it addicted to it.
And it wasn't called this at the time, but it's in the cloud.
You don't have to have your mail stored on your machine or a specific server.
You can log in, access it anywhere on any network, any device.
All this stuff sounds so boring, but it was completely breakthrough.
So obviously Larry and Sergei are jazzed, first because of just the incredible nature of this product.
And Larry especially, he is a product person.
And his view is, if we can build a better product and it's on the web, then it's good for Google.
and we should do it.
And that is a huge part of the motivation underlying Gmail
and everything we're going to talk about.
But there's also another reason,
and that's Microsoft.
Because Google was doing great, printing money,
AdWords, search, greatest product,
greatest business of all time.
But they've got a big risk,
which is that everything about Google,
everything about the web right now,
flows through Microsoft,
flows through Internet Explorer.
Yeah, Google's entire money printing machine was built on top of Microsoft's and at two layers.
So to this point, over 90% of Google search queries were done on Windows PCs, and 90% were done in Internet Explorer running on those PCs.
So Google's got the killer app for the web in search, and the thing under them is a browser owned by Microsoft, and the thing under that is an operating system owned by Microsoft.
Yes.
They exist at the pleasure of Microsoft at this point in history.
And Microsoft has a different business model.
So Google's business model, the greatest of all time, is people use Google search, they discover more the web, they spend more time online on these new sites and services that they're discovering.
As they're spending more time online, they search more.
Searching more leads them to discover even more new sites and services.
The cycle repeats itself and Google just monetizes the whole thing.
Yes.
And web usage isn't bad for Microsoft, but if the platform of the next generation becomes the web, and people are writing web applications instead of Windows applications, that makes Microsoft's platform a lot less valuable versus other operating systems like, say, Mac, or say a future where we change away from desktop computers altogether.
Yes. At a minimum, Microsoft doesn't business model-wise care about the web because they don't monetize the web.
makes money by OEM selling PCs that have Windows on them,
and then Microsoft sells software that goes on those PCs.
So at a minimum, they don't care.
And at a maximum, like you're saying,
web apps are at existential risk to Microsoft.
Oh, my God, there's a future application platform
that just doesn't really require our participation,
other than the fact that we control IE,
and at least for now, that's really important.
And most of Microsoft hasn't realized this yet,
Thank God for Google, Microsoft's distracted with the albatross that was Longhorn that would become Windows Vista.
A few people in Microsoft realized this, but Google for sure realizes this, though.
Eric Schmidt, for Double Shore, realizes it because he was the CEO of Novell before coming to Google, and who is Novell's competitor, Microsoft?
And Microsoft crushed them.
So why Google's so jazzed about Gmail, they need to build up leverage with consumers, with users,
that they're going to demand rich web applications
so that if Microsoft ever tries to disadvantage Google
or disadvantage web apps and things moving to the web,
really the only defense against that
is if consumers have already adopted this stuff
and love it and would revolt.
And so this is what Gmail is.
Yes.
So Gmail developments trucking along through 2001, 2002, 2003.
It's hard to remember now.
It took three years to develop Gmail.
Long development cycle, yeah.
To be ready to release.
publicly, and then it was in beta for like 10 years.
Yeah.
But I think the reason it took so long was this was all new.
There wasn't a lot of depth of knowledge out there about JavaScript, certainly not about
Ajax and XML dynamic refreshing.
It was really hard to program.
Today, you've got all these nice abstraction layers, these frameworks that people have
built to do web development.
That really didn't exist to make Ajax applications.
Yes.
Okay, so Google's finally getting ready to launch it.
We're in 2004.
There's a couple questions.
One, the service, for all the reasons we just described, Google, Larry, Sergey, Eric,
they want it to be so compelling that consumers demanded.
It takes off like wildfire.
It builds this strategic mode against Microsoft, but it will cost money.
There's a reason other people don't do this.
Yeah, there's a reason that a gigabyte of free storage seems a little crazy.
Even if you assume, and I think this is probably directionally correct,
that because of Google's command,
infrastructure advantage, they could launch Gmail at like one-tenth of the cost that anybody
else could. Also, remember, there's no public cloud at this point in time. So you'd have to go
build your own data center to do this. You can't just launch on AWS. There is no AWS.
But even assume that Google has a 90% cost advantage on the infrastructure side. The state of the
art is other competitors are offering four megabytes of free storage. Google's going to offer a gig.
sure, knock that down by 90%
but the effective cost is still 100 megabytes.
So how do you get around
being flooded with costs
and infrastructure demand when you launch it?
They come up with the invite system.
Yes.
And this is so brilliant.
I actually don't know if it was designed
as this sort of prestigious growth strategy thing
that it became.
Anyone got any Gmail invites?
Please, I'll do anything.
Yeah, yeah, please, please, please.
Or if it was truly because of the infrastructure cost,
Either way, it's just brilliant.
When they launch it on April 1st, 2004,
they send out 1,000 seed invites to Gmail.
It's a private invite-only internet service.
They send them out to influencers.
The term didn't exist back in the day,
but influential people and journalists.
And then each user has a set number of invites
that they can give to other users to invite their friends.
And it was low.
It was like five or something.
And then it wasn't clear when they would top back up, but you'd give out your five and then at some point you'd come in and you'd have five more. You'd have three more. It was like super dynamic and very clearly whatever Google felt like they could give away from their servers at the moment.
Yep. But it was so brilliant. It made it feel like you're in this special world of people in the know that would super incentivized viral word of mouth growth because I'm telling you it's a gigabyte of free storage. It's this incredible service. They're selling on eBay.
for 150 bucks. There was a monetary value to these things. Yes, yes, they were trading on eBay for
average price of 150 bucks in the early days. And so I'm giving you this gift. Incredible.
And look, everybody wants this, but you need to have the product quality that cashes the check.
Yes, it needs to be a real gift. Right. And it was. It was just better. It wasn't just something I'd
sign out for and then churn and be like, cool, I locked in my username or whatever. It was something
that you actually used every day, or in the words of Larry Page, past the toothbrush test.
It was a part of your daily habit, something you'd do once or twice a day.
I wish I could only refresh Gmail once or twice a day.
So, David, was this the first software that used a wait list like this?
Because obviously it's become very popular sense.
I think so.
So that's how they take care of the cost side of the equation is not running out of control, is the invite strategy.
Well, still not making any money, though.
That's question number two. How are we going to make money from this thing? Because, yeah, okay, there's all these strategic reasons to do it. It'll increase more traffic on the web, time spent. People will search more. We'll make more money indirectly. But they still don't really know that. So they think, okay, we need a monetization strategy baked into the product itself.
Yes. Well, how do you make money from anything at Google?
This actually came up during development. So even in the prototyping phase, Paul logs into the database of ads, which is just funny that at that point in time, Google's got this.
big database of ads. Right. Yeah. I'm just going to access the ads database. You know,
all of them. Yes. And these are the ads that would run when you searched and landed on a
search results page. And so he decided to do content matching against your inbox and just show those
ads on the page next to your email. And even though they weren't meant for that, it actually
turned out that these search ads were pretty relevant. It actually was a decent ad to be showing
you while you're looking at your inbox about similar topics. So he just rolled
this out, even though all these people in Google are actually using it as their mail client at the
time, people were pissed. People were like, are you looking at my emails? You know, all the things
that would then sort of come later in the public actually happened inside Google first, but Larry and
Sergei loved it. They were like, oh, this is so obviously the answer. Interestingly, this experiment
predates AdSense. So Google has the display ad offering for website publishers that's called
AdSense that's different than AdWords, which is.
as the keyword advertisements on a search results page. AdSense hasn't launched yet. And there's
sort of multiple versions of history here. How much credit for AdSense does Gmail get in discovering
this? But it is safe to say that the idea of display ads that are content matched against
your Gmail did contribute to the idea for the first version of AdSense, which are essentially the same
thing, content matched ads, just on a publisher website instead of the content of your inbox.
So the product launches publicly April 2004, as you would expect. People go nuts. It is truly a revolutionary product. And Gmail grows over the next 20 years from that 1,000 initial public beta user seed base to over 2 billion today. And it's still by far the best email service. Even if you use another front end for your email for your Gmail, like superhuman,
whatnot today. You still want Gmail on the back end, at least as a consumer.
Yes. So once Gmail starts to take off, Larry and Sergey and Eric see this and they're like,
wow, we should do this a lot. Let's go. Let's build as many web applications as we possibly can
imagine. What else can go into the browser that we didn't think was possible before?
This fires on every single cylinder for us.
Most importantly, grow the web.
Grow usage.
You grow the web.
You grow time that people spend in web browsers.
They will search more.
We will make more money.
And beyond that, with some of these products, like Gmail,
we can monetize the products themselves.
Great.
Two, we are building our strategic moat against Microsoft.
the faster that we get the internet using public to fall in love with and use web applications,
the less and less leverage Microsoft has over us.
To use sort of Ben Thompson speak, Google realizes the web can become the point of integration.
Maybe the OS isn't what the whole universe has to target, the hardware makers, the OEMs, the application makers, the users.
If applications start living in the browser, then the web can become the point of integration.
Users just need a browser, and OEMs just need an operating system that can access the browser.
And what's so great for Google, because of their business model, sure, it's great when they build and own and operate and run and monetize web applications themselves, like they do with Gmail, like they'll do with maps, like they'll do with docs, like they'll do with YouTube that we're about to talk about.
But if they don't, it doesn't matter.
As long as anybody does it.
Right.
They just need to be wind at the back of web adoption.
Yes.
So that leads to a whole flood of Google web products and services to come.
But before we tell that story.
Yes.
Now is the perfect time to talk about our presenting partner, J.P. Morgan Payments.
They're investing billions every year into technology and product development.
In fact, Jamie Diamond even referenced it on stage in our interview last month.
This investment has led to them becoming a powerful engine
for marketplaces, fintech companies, and platforms to deliver growth, stability, and scale for their customers.
And these days, the best companies have made payments infrastructure invisible to their users.
If you're booking a ride, buying something from a marketplace, or managing a subscription,
the magic happens when payments feel seamless and integrated.
This is what JPMorgan Payments brings with their embedded finance solutions.
Rather than bolting on payments as an afterthought, you can embed the payments infrastructure directly into your platform
without customers having to leave to complete a transaction.
This makes your products more seamless,
and as we've seen from Google,
the best products with the stickiest user bases
are often the simplest for users.
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All right, David.
So Gmail.
We've got our existence proof of a,
a Ajax-based web app going viral. People love it. We can really build web applications now. Let's go nuts.
Yes. So the next big web apps following Gmail were maps, docs, and spreadsheets. All absolutely incredible.
And it was not clear that these things were possible with web technologies. These required incredible technical and product vision.
So, first Maps.
We actually did a whole acquired episode back in the day just about Google Maps.
The three companies they acquired.
Yeah.
It starts in 2003.
So even before the Gmail launch, when a young associate product manager, APM at Google, named Brett Taylor, that Brett Taylor.
Of course, of ACQ2 fame, Brett Taylor.
Yes, recent ACQ2 guest, Brett Taylor.
Oh, yeah, also friend feed founder, Facebook, CTO.
co-ceo of Salesforce, chairman of OpenAI.
Former chairman of Twitter.
Yeah, yeah.
That Brad Taylor starts his career out of Stanford in 2003
as an associate product manager at Google.
He ends up going to Larry, and it's like, we're missing out here.
AOL has MapQuest, which they've just bought for a billion dollars.
And I'm hearing through the grapevine that Yahoo is about to make a big push
and launch Yahoo Maps.
And so, as you would expect, Larry's like,
oh, yeah, is this a web product?
Yes, of course.
Go do this.
For all these things we're studying here,
there's a business rationale,
which might be extremely indirect,
but it's there.
This idea of increasing web use
increases Google search,
which increases the money printer.
But then there's also an abstract rationale,
which is our mission is to organize the world's information
and make it universally accessible and useful.
And Maps is squarely in the middle of that.
Yeah.
Now, the thing was, as big as MapQuest and Yahoo Maps were about to become at the time, and they were big.
I remember using them.
My parents used them.
Everybody on the Internet used these services.
They weren't what you think of as Google Maps today.
They were static web pages.
Yep.
They didn't use Ajax.
And the whole point was to get driving directions.
That you could print out.
Exactly. And the business model for these services was on the printed piece of paper that people would print out, you would put ads on there.
Yep.
It's like a Trojan horse newspaper business.
Right.
So Brett and Larry and Marissa are looking at this, like, I think we can do better than this.
So they go out and they buy a little company in Australia called Ware 2 Technologies, which was started by these two brothers, Lars and Jens Rasmussen.
who were incredible engineers.
And they had built a real-time, interactive Maps application,
except it was a installed desktop app.
And so they're meeting with them, and Larry's like,
okay, this is what we want, but we need it on the web.
I think actually the quote was,
we like the web at Google.
And this is how good of engineers the Rasmussen's were.
they go off and in I think three weeks they rewrite and re-architect the entire application to run as a web app
and they basically independently discover and implement a lot of the JavaScript and Ajax features that Google was working on internally for Gmail.
Gmail still hadn't launched yet.
Amazing.
So Google ends up buying where to.
That becomes the core of Google Maps.
Around the same time, they also acquired two other companies ZipDash that did,
traffic data and keyhole, which would become Google Earth.
Now, Google Earth was an installed desktop application.
Ultimately, everything that Google Earth was building would get folded back into Maps later.
It's actually not true.
I thought that, and just last night I realized you can still go to earth.gov.com
and get a completely different 3D experience than Google Maps.
Oh, no way.
It's all in the web now.
It's unbelievably powerful.
Oh, so it is a web app, but it's separate.
than math. Yes. Oh, I didn't know that. Oh, I got to check that out. It's amazing.
That's awesome. Yes. Keyhole and Google Earth, I think, is my favorite part of our first Google
episode earlier this year that the whole thing ended up just being a Trojan horse downloader to get
Google Toolbar installed on Internet Explorer on people's systems. They're organizing the world's
information and making it universally accessible and useful, but also it comes with Google Toolbar.
Yeah, the greatest distribution hack for Google search of all time.
Yes.
Anyway, back to Google Maps and where to.
February 2005, Google Maps launches.
People go nuts of it, a live mapping, dynamic web application.
Do you want to know my favorite Easter egg for the first day launch of Google Maps?
I don't know if you know this.
When you load it up, Maps.com, do you know what visually you saw?
I have no recollection.
You saw a great big ocean and North America, and then floating in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, you see the UK, and then there is nothing past it.
They hadn't built it yet.
They hadn't built it yet.
Europe, Asia, Africa, not included.
It's not even like it's off limits.
It looks like there's an ocean where Europe should be.
How do you decide what the MVP is, you know, the minimum viable price?
product to ship on the map. That's amazing. All right, there's one more really important piece
of Maps, which is the next year in 2006, they released the API. And this is what really
kicks off the Web2.0 era. Gmail and JavaScript and Ajax had inspired developers out there
for sure to make rich a web apps and people were doing that. When Google releases the Maps API,
this thing called mashups starts happening.
You remember this?
Absolutely.
It's now super easy to grab Google Maps
and build stuff on top of it.
And it's really hot.
And this enables startups.
So like Zillow, Uber, eventually DoorDash, Airbnb,
think about all the companies
that just couldn't exist without the Google Maps API.
There was that whole web of geo-related company.
too. Remember that era of mobile, social, local, most so low. Oh, yeah, Foursquare and
goala, yeah, all those. All this existed because Google Maps existed. So back to Google's
overall strategy here and adoption of web apps and sort of building this moat and defense against
Microsoft. This is just incredible. I mean, here's Maps itself as a first class, rich web
application that tens, eventually hundreds, today billions, two billion plus users use and love
every day. And now here's this API that's making it really easy to help other startups and other
companies go build great web apps too. The lock-in just keeps getting deeper and deeper and deeper
for the web. Yep. And at first, the API was notoriously free or very inexpensive at very high
limits for a long time. That's different now. But for the longest time, it was just this is a part of
the mission. So we're doing it and we'll figure out the business later. It's a very sort of founder
driven thing. Now it's popular to create maps. I mean, Apple at some point flipped into doing it and
there's these sort of other third party companies and there's the open street maps and all this
stuff. For the first five to maybe eight years, Google was kind of the only ones that had a passion for
this and a willing to spend into the giant hole that you need to create maps of the whole world.
I mean, is they incredibly hard data and engineering problem? And, you know, they had to go
draw all their own maps from scratch, acquire the data, figure out how to get fresh data all
the time, create a crowdsourced crazy thing among Google, is it Google Maps Explorers or something
like that, all the people that would update these things. This is a extremely Googly problem
and a founder bet to be like, nope, we're going to go spend hundreds of millions of dollars,
billions of dollars on this. Drive cars around, taking pictures of everything, figure out how to
not overshare personal information on this, do it dynamically because you're capturing a huge
amount. I mean, it's just, it's a wacky, wacky engineering problem that is daunting and they
took it on. Yep. And we're not going to talk about this today, but put a pin in for the next
episode is one of the most incredibly strategically valuable data assets for the AI era and
specifically for self-driving cars. Yes. But today, Maps has over 2 billion active users this
year. They don't break out revenue, but estimates are that Maps does well over 5 billion in
revenue, maybe even 10 billion in revenue. The larger part of that is ads. You see recommended places
to go around you all the time whenever you open Google Maps now that are sponsored ads just like
on Google Search. And then the smaller part of that is from the API licensing, David, that you
were talking about. But this is a real business for Google today. Yep. All right. Next ones that
we've got to talk about. Docs and spreadsheets. So these aren't the biggest Google apps out there today.
I think if you lump them all together into workspace and ad drive, it is over a billion users.
That whole suite is among their most used products.
That whole, you call it Office Suite? Is that what you would call it?
It sounds like an office type suite. It's a good idea. Someone should do that.
So docs and spreadsheets hit Microsoft right where it hurts. Office.
So people have tried both before Google and after Google to compete with Microsoft in productivity.
forever. Word Perfect, Lotus Notes, Lotus 1,2, 3. We talked all about that on our Microsoft
episode. By the way, Word Perfect, acquired by and run by Novell, who is the CEO of Novell, Eric Schmidt.
Eric knows all about this. But here's what I will say, David. If you were starting on the foot of
competing with Microsoft or trying to build a word processor or trying to build a spreadsheet,
you would be doomed for failure.
What Google was doing was saying
there is something that is uniquely possible
with web applications and Ajax
in this Web 2.0 era for the first time
and that thing is real-time collaboration.
Real-time multi-user collaboration.
These were the first
I've tried to rack my brain.
I talked to Sam Chilis,
the founder of rightly, which Google Acquire,
which became Google Docs.
He believes these were the first real-time, multi-user collaborative pieces of software in history.
It just wasn't possible before the web.
Yeah, Jonathan Rochelle, the founder of the company that would be acquired that would become Google spreadsheets,
basically said the same thing.
His comment was, we actually didn't know if it was possible to do this in the web.
Google said, based on the success we're seeing with Gmail, I bet we could do actual spreadsheets in the browser.
or with real-time collaboration.
And when the Sheets team came in,
it was truly an open question
of can we make it
so you and another person
can party on the same
very basic spreadsheet
at the same time.
Hmm, interesting.
The Dox team,
so Doxo was an acquisition,
it was a company called Rightly
that was founded by Sam
and his two co-founders
who were great programmers
they've worked together
for many years.
I used Rightly
before it became a Google product.
No way.
You were like one of very few people
who did that.
Yeah.
Because it was not an independent
company for long.
Hmm.
Product launched August 2005, Google bought the company March 2006.
So you had about a six-month window.
Wow.
But yeah, they built real-time collaborative word processing as a web app inspired by Gmail
and everything that was going on at Google.
The whole company started as, oh, for our next project, let's explore what we can do with JavaScript and Ajax.
And, oh, what would it be like if we put a...
word processor on the web. They weren't actually even thinking about collaboration at first. But then as they
were working on it together, they naturally started collaborating and thought, oh, this is the killer
feature. That's funny. That's different than the spreadsheets team. Their whole thing at first was
we're not going to make a better spreadsheet than Excel. So if we put it in the web, it has to be about
sharing collaboration. Yep. And so to your earlier point, nobody can compete with Microsoft
and productivity software.
One, because they'd been doing it so long,
they had this feature wall of so many features
that people needed.
Two proprietary file formats.
They had a network effect of the file format.
You built your big model in Excel.
Good luck.
Other people need to be able to run it on their installed desktop applications.
Good luck getting somebody to try downloading
or buying a new piece of software
and installing it on their machine.
But three, I mean, the biggest, by far, the enterprise agreement.
This is Microsoft's whole entire business model.
Right.
You don't have to be best in breed in any specific thing.
You just have to be a platform with everything.
Yep.
And IT departments will buy it.
And especially for productivity software, really all the money is in B2B and work applications.
And so if IT departments are buying the Microsoft Enterprise Agreement,
they're getting everything good luck unseating.
Microsoft office. And I'm not sure you could do this as an independent business, because think about
how long Google went with these things before they were adopted by bigger companies. For the longest
time, it was, oh, a Google Doc, that's like a thing for either you use that for your personal
life or maybe like a startup would use it. But even a medium-sized company, you can't be serious.
Get out of here with that. And Google was basically able to subsidize it because they had a giant
existing business. You are so right. Nobody except Google could do that.
for a whole bunch of reasons.
One, you talk about subsidizing.
Imagine trying to build this software
as an independent company
or really even as any other company.
It would require a lot of infrastructure.
Real-time multi-user collaboration
in a web app.
Gosh, that seems like really complicated
server and back-end infrastructure.
For Google, it's what they do.
Running docks and sheets,
the incremental load to Google's infrastructure
was trivial.
compared to search. They already had it built out. It was super cheap.
Yep.
Two, they don't need to make money from it. This is the big reason why nobody else could compete.
Microsoft has all the dollars completely on lockdown because of the enterprise agreement.
Big dollars. These small and medium businesses would of course pay for something, but those dollars don't add up to be nearly as big.
Right, exactly. Google, though, that's fine. Microsoft can keep all the dollars. All we care about is people,
people use the web. And in this instance, particularly with Office and productivity, really this is about putting the screws to Microsoft a little bit and distracting them. And from Google's point of view, this is a cheap distraction. If this gets Microsoft all spun up, Microsoft is now all of a sudden getting asked all the time, what's your web strategy for Office? When are you going to add collaboration to Word and Excel, et cetera, et cetera? They don't have any answers. I literally worked on this.
My internship was at Microsoft, and I worked on adding headers and footers to the Microsoft Word web app.
We were porting the Windows code to have perfect document fidelity to the web.
So when you looked on the web and then printed from the web, the document would be laid out pixel for pixel, character for character, exactly how it would look on the printed page.
When you have that requirement, that is a hard, hard engineering task.
and it's still not as good as Google Docs.
Right.
I love it that this launched your technology career.
Yes.
Amazing.
But yeah, from Google's perspective, this is amazing.
Microsoft is now forced to bring their crown jewels to the web,
which they don't want to do,
and Ben, to your point,
because they have to make it look and feel
and function exactly like the installed desktop apps,
this is going to take them a long time and be a big investment.
fantastic. And no matter what, it's going to be more complicated, because with Google, since
it's all free, there's no licensing. Someone just shares a Google Doc with you. If you have
permission to view it, you view it. With Microsoft, I remember at first, it was sort of antithetical.
It was like, but what if I haven't bought Word? Can I just use Word for free in the web then?
Right. Is Microsoft okay with that? Am I going to hit some weird usage tier? So it's confusing for
users. It forces the company to think about pricing and packaging. It was a masterstroke by Google.
Yep. So fast forward to today. It's hard to
to get real actual apples-to-apples data on Google Workspace versus Microsoft Office users.
But basically the way to think about the market is that Google has the vast majority of
users and usage of productivity software, and Microsoft still has the vast majority of dollars.
And that's fine.
Google's super happy about that.
Is that true that there's more active users of Google Workspace than there is of Office?
Yeah, I mean, I think if you look at users of docs or sheets or slides, it's in the billion-ish, 500 million billion range for each of those.
Office, I think, has a couple hundred million users worldwide.
Whoa.
Yeah, that's crazy.
I didn't realize that.
Pretty wild, right?
But to my point about the dollars, so Microsoft's productivity and business process,
segment, which is mostly office. I think LinkedIn is now part of this too. Last year generated over
$120 billion in revenue. Google reports workspace as part of the cloud segment. So all of cloud,
inclusive of their infrastructure as a service, all the AI infrastructure, all that. The whole
cloud segment for Google last year did about $50 billion in revenue, less than 50. So Microsoft,
Microsoft's productivity segment, 120.
Office is the big piece.
And that's high margin revenue.
High margin revenue.
Google's office products are some small portion of a $50 billion revenue segment.
So, yeah, Microsoft's still got all the money.
Yes.
Google's got all the users, and everybody's happy.
But you're so right.
Everyone is happy.
This is exactly what Google wants.
Yeah.
And ultimately, today Microsoft is fine with this arrangement, too.
The ultimate fun Coda, though, is Sam Shillis, founder of Rightly,
He would go on to manage you to all of docs and sheets.
And I think he actually managed maps at some point, too.
He is now the deputy CTO of Microsoft.
Careers are long.
Amazing.
The interesting thing, reflecting on Google's actual business here
and comparing it against all the things that we're talking about,
Google essentially one search by the mid-late 2000s.
I mean, I know Bing hasn't even launched yet, and we'll get to that.
But search was going to continue becoming a more and more giant market,
And so all this stuff they're doing, it's like, oh, we've won, and this market is naturally going to become large.
I guess let's just fuel it getting larger and try to do a bunch of stuff under the umbrella of our mission.
But what do we really need to do?
And the slightly more altruistic answer, I suspect if Larry Page was sitting next to us, he would say, what is the goal of a company?
The goal of a company isn't build the largest business necessarily.
It's to fulfill its mission.
And, yeah, we got a money printing machine from search,
and we're investing a lot of money still in search and making that better.
But all these things fulfill our mission, too.
Yep.
And I think these things are all true.
Yes.
So on the back of the success of maps, docs, spreadsheets,
really starts to inform Google's strategy here.
And specifically, they've seen, hey, we can acquire these web app,
web 2.0 companies.
bring them into Google,
turbocharge them,
offer these magical experiences to consumers.
We get all this strategic value out of them,
both on the offensive and defensive front.
We can operate these things
at a fraction of the expense
that it would cost anyone else to do so,
standalone company or part of other big companies.
And some of the things we could buy
actually fit into our core ads business quite well.
Yeah.
What if we went big
with this, like really big.
Like something super expensive to run
that requires storage of massive videos
and bandwidth for streaming
these massive videos and lawsuit protection.
Yep, probably also costs a lot to buy it
because it's well funded from Sequoia.
That leads us to YouTube.
But before we do that,
now is a great time to thank
Friend of the show, Anthropic,
and their AI assistant Claude.
So as we were researching Google's expansion here
from Just Search into being a real platform company here in the 2000s
with Gmail, Chrome, Android, Workspace,
everything we're going to get to later in the episode,
the complexity just skyrocketed with all these interconnected systems
that needed to scale to billions of users
and keep information flowing between all the various products and services
that Google was launching.
The funny thing is how quaint that problem seems today.
compared to the scale, speed, and interconnectedness that you need in the AI era,
if you're an enterprise building today in AI, you need to deal with all of this times 10.
Yes, so enter Claude.
What makes Claude different for the enterprise is sustained performance on complex tasks.
We're talking about the kind of work that would typically take your senior engineers weeks,
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I wouldn't know anything about that.
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Claude is actually the most adopted AI within enterprises when it comes to their API.
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And just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
All right, David, the YouTube story.
Ooh, the big cahuna.
The big cahuna.
Ah.
The most embarrassing thing in acquired history
was our early episode on YouTube.
All right, I have got a proposal for you.
Okay, I'm ready for it.
You want to take it out of the feed, delete it?
Today, we're setting the record straight.
When we finish this section, we are regrading YouTube.
We are updating the acquired canon. It's happening.
Oh, let's do it. We're bringing grading back, baby.
Great. I'm glad you're into it. I love it.
Awesome.
All right, YouTube.
2003, so same time frame as everything we're talking about here.
Gmail hasn't even launched yet.
Google starts working on Google Video.
And the idea is that there's a lot of information in video.
And thus it fits Google's mission, Ben, as you were saying earlier.
And also, well, there's just so much more advertising dollars in TV
than anywhere else in the global economy.
To this point in time, TV was the bulk of ad spend.
Yep.
If you go look at some of the old Mary Meeker Internet Trends decks,
remember from this time period,
and you look at the share of global ad dollars spent on TV
versus any other category, it's just so much bigger than anything.
else. David, I am so glad you did this. We are brothers. I did the exact same thing to try to
tee this up. Amazing. I have the stats in front of me. For listeners, digital advertising,
you know, Google's universe would not eclipse TV until 2017, 2018. Wow. So almost 15 years in the future
from when we're talking about here in 2003. Yes. That is the wildest thing that TV was bigger.
than digital for that long. Mary Meeker famously had this point that she made every single year
that the attention was all in the digital economy, but there was this gap and the ad monetization
hadn't caught up yet. And it took all the way until 2018 for the flip to finally happen where
digital overtook television. Thanks to YouTube. Yes. And Facebook and meta and TikTok and et cetera.
And the rest of Google too. I know, I know. So this Google,
video project actually came out of the ads org. It didn't come out of engineering and the rest
of the Google product org. Yeah, it was motivated by, hey, there's a lot of money in TV. And, of course,
this fits the mission. There's a lot of information in video. We should totally do this.
Here's how Larry describes it. Google Video was first launched in 2005 as a search service for
television content. Yes. Because TV closed captioning made
search possible and user-generated video had yet to take off, but it subsequently evolved
into a site where individuals and corporations alike could post their own videos. They were digitizing
TV because the transcription wasn't as good as it is today, so they needed the closed captioning
data to make it searchable. And they were almost like meta-searching. They were looking for
other websites that allowed people to upload video and including that in the search results also.
Yep. Sure, you can see how
this conceivably could be a product vision you could have at the time, but Google Video was
the wrong product. The problem was, one, you couldn't actually watch the video. It was just
search that then directed you, just like Google's main search business model, off of Google Video
to go consume it somewhere else. Yeah, in the beginning, it didn't even have a player. Whoa,
I didn't realize that. Yeah, crazy. And the bigger problem, though, well, that's a pretty big problem.
Another big problem, shall we say, was that the focus was on traditionally produced head kind of content, not long tail, not user-generated content.
It was really tied to TV.
There was a press release that said that they could search the content of TV programs, find programs containing the content they're looking for, and discover when and where the program will next air.
Yeah.
So meanwhile, obviously, here we are in 2004, five, six.
consumer-generated digital video is becoming a thing,
either via standalone new devices like the FlipCam that's coming out from...
Flip was a startup, right?
And then Cisco bought it?
Yeah, my other internship employer bought Flip while I was there.
Yeah, this is like Ben Gilbert personal history.
Yes.
But more commonly so, I mean, there were dedicated devices like the Flip Cam,
but digital point-and-shoe cameras had gotten so good by this point in time.
This is going to come back up later in the episode.
People thought this was the big consumer electronic device vector before smartphones.
People were really, really excited about how good and how universally adopted digital cameras were.
All of a sudden, in the mid-2000s for the first time, anybody could make a video at any time.
And I-Movie was just becoming a thing.
So you could shoot it on your point-and-shoot.
And you can edit on your computer.
That's right.
So, YouTube.
In early 2005, three PayPal employees, part of the PayPal Mafia, actually fairly junior employees at PayPal,
Chad Hurley, Javid Karim, and Steve Chen, leave PayPal and create YouTube.
Okay, Ben, I have two deep-cut YouTube.
corporate history trivia items for you.
Number one, do you know what YouTube's original tagline was?
The name of the company was YouTube.
What was the tagline and the value prop?
I have no idea.
Tune in hookup.
Really?
It was a video dating service.
Oh, I think I did know that.
And they actually posted Craigslist.
ads in the Bay Area for attractive women to make videos to post as profiles on the site.
Unbelievable.
And they got like no responses, as you would expect.
Thank goodness for them in Google, though, because then they pivoted into a general purpose
video uploading site that anybody could upload anything that they made YouTube.
Okay, so that's trivia question number one.
Okay.
Trivia question number two.
Do you know who Chad Hurley, Chad was the CEO, who Chad's father-in-law at the time was?
Oh, no, I have no idea.
Jim Clark.
Of SGII and Netscape?
Of Silicon Graphics and Netscape.
Jim Clark, that Jim Clark.
Didn't know that.
Yeah.
So not only were they, part of the PayPal team and PayPal Mafia, like, they had the best advisor of all time to navigate the Silicon Valley.
ecosystem and the internet ecosystem in Jim Clark. So the brilliance of YouTube, and it really was
absolutely brilliant, was threefold. One, it was super easy for anyone to upload a video. So they
had a killer content acquisition model, anybody, anytime, anything. And as soon as the
servers process it, we'll put it live. No copyright checks. Unlike,
a Google video, which would take one to two days. It's all about copyright checks, for humans to
pour over it, make sure that it was all good and bless it, and then put it live, which of course
won't scale in the UGC era. YouTube's just like, whatever, upload it. Yeah. Two, super easy
for anyone to watch a video. You need a really good viewer in the web app to view the videos.
Google Video didn't have it at the beginning. So, killer content consumption
model. Go to YouTube.com, find something, or find a link, or number three, brilliant thing about
YouTube, see a YouTube video embedded on another website. Boom, you're watching the video. Killer
growth and distribution model. And also, YouTube, pretty much from the beginning, had great search.
You can search YouTube and find videos that you're looking for. Pretty quickly, YouTube became and
still is, Google talks about this all the time, the second largest search engine on Earth
behind Google.
It's amazing.
Search is happening on YouTube.
That happened quickly.
I always thought that was a more recent last 10 years phenomenon.
I think that happened very quickly.
YouTube traffic scaled so fast and so big.
So you can see how YouTube here not only are they the correct video platform for the web and just doing it much better than Google.
Google's doing it with Google Video, there's actually some version of the world where they might
become a real competitor to Google's core business. If all these searches are happening,
they could add search for other things on YouTube, too. Right. I don't think they had any plans
to do that, but it's the same rationale of Mark Zuckerberg saying, uh-oh, everyone's using WhatsApp
for messaging. Whether or not they put in a social media feed stream, they always could,
and so it's really dangerous to me for them to be out there aggregating all the users and
attention and habits when they always could do something like that. Exactly. Same dynamic.
And whereas in the previous categories of apps that we talked about, Google had the advantage
of uniquely being able to do it as Google in a way that startups couldn't. Here, it's a little
bit the opposite. YouTube as a small startup has the advantage of, oh, copyright, rules, laws,
I don't know. We're just a platform. We're just a startup. Anybody upload anything. Google, by this point in time, is a public company. No way they could behave like this.
Well, it's funny, they could, but they wouldn't.
They actually could do it and stay in business, whereas YouTube can say, eh, whatever, but then they're going to go out of business because they're going to get sued out of business.
So it's this really interesting sort of catch-22 of this is the way to start and get all the users, because this is the best user experience, and at the same time, it will not work as a resource-constrained small company.
Once it is started, it needs to be part of Google.
Right.
Yes.
Obviously, we're going to get to that.
But in the beginning, though, oh, my gosh.
I mean, the embeds were a beautiful distribution growth mechanic for YouTube,
but people were just uploading copyrighted video that people could watch for free.
I mean, it's almost like Gmail.
It is so unbelievably compelling to a consumer when your friend tells you about YouTube
or just sends you a link or you see an embed page of, whoa, I can go watch.
lazy Sunday from Lonely Island and Saturday Night Live in my web browser any time I want for free
with no commercials. Yes. Yes, I want that. And in fact, when users started uploading
Lazy Sunday, the Lonely Island skip from Saturday Live to YouTube, this is in that brief phase
where YouTube was an ascendant startup and not yet part of Google, that one skit increased YouTube
traffic by 83%. Wow. Unbelievable. And so they very quickly raise money from Sequoia. Is that right?
Yep. So it was basically incubated at Sequoia when the three founders left PayPal.
Sequoia invested right away. I think it was Ruloff Botha's first investment when he joined.
Because Ruloff knew them from PayPal. He's also part of the PayPal Mafia. Exactly. And then
Sequoia led another round pretty quickly thereafter because the infrastructure costs started, as you
imagine scaling astronomically here.
Yeah, so three things that are very expensive, two of which are ongoing, one is a one-time
cost. The one-time cost, but still expensive, is encoding the video. This might eventually
play on multiple types of devices and multiple browsers, so there's a lot of encoding that has to
happen. Two, then, are just big, ongoing variable costs. You have to store all this video,
and the biggest of all, the networking, the bandwidth, becomes extremely expensive, and costs you
every single time someone plays the video.
Your biggest cost driver scales with minutes watched.
So that is eventually going to kill you
unless you have an aligned business model.
Yep. By the way, it would also be really nice
if whoever owns and operates this
had its own really good, really cheap infrastructure
with all of these things built into it.
Yeah.
So, yeah, pretty quickly, within a little over a year
of launching, YouTube is in way over its head.
the content issues, the copyright issues, the infrastructure scaling issues.
It's all exactly what they wanted.
It's going as well as they could have hoped, and it isn't way over its head.
Yes.
And if this had happened today, you could probably raise enough capital from the private markets
to address this and scale up as a company fast enough,
especially with public cloud, that you could probably build this as a standalone company.
Yeah.
I mean, today you can go raise billions of dollars as a series of,
a startup. If you're in the right space doing the most interesting things with the big market.
2005, 2006, not the same kind of private capital available. And of course, there's no way the
company could go public with all these issues or anything. Right. In particular, there was a giant
suit from Viacom. Yes. So because of these things, YouTube ends up basically putting itself up for sale.
I mean, they have no leverage in content negotiations with rights holders and infrastructure.
structure is killing them. So in November 2006, which is less than 18 months after the product
launched, Google buys YouTube for $1.65 billion in stock. All Google stock. Yes, we heard in the
research that after this deal, Patrick Bichette, I think was the CFO of Google at the time.
He said never again, right? This was our biggest mistake. Said never again. This is the last
stock deal that we ever do.
Google's market cap has 20xed
since the day that this deal closed.
If they had paid in cash,
they would have made an extra 20 times
multiple on whatever you already
think the multiple is on their
purchase of YouTube.
The thing is, though,
we will correct the acquired record
at the end of this section.
Either way, even if Google paid
20 times $1.6 billion for
this, they got a screaming deal.
YouTube is so,
valuable. All right, I have some of the numbers from the first few years that I was able to
cobble together, and then I want to talk about some of the product evolution over the years.
Yes, great. All right, so Google buys it for $1.65 billion. And interestingly,
Shashir Maroda this week went on the Grit podcast, the Kleiner Perkins podcast, and laid out
a bunch of data on this. And I actually didn't have a chance to reach out to Sharia because
it just came out. But a lot of this is from that conversation. So, after,
the acquisition, he said, and Shashir was the head of product and basically the CPO, CTO at YouTube,
not right after the acquisition, but within a year kind of came in for four or five years.
So after the acquisition, he said it was doing about 30 million in revenue.
So they did have revenue.
I believe, just to foreshadow our next chapter, that was in the form of programmatic advertising
that was on the double-click ad exchange that they were using to make money.
They were losing about a billion dollars a year run rate.
on 30 million in revenue. The amount of money they lost was almost exactly equal to a penny per
view. So just imagine every time you loaded YouTube in those years, Google would just flush a penny
down the drain. They got to figure out something to do about this. So for the first couple of years,
the CFO at the time was terrified of its scaling. Like, please don't scale in its current state,
but of course, there's nothing they can do. The cat's out of the bag. It's scaling. And the
CFO was exploring, hey, can we sell this to one of the other companies who was bidding on?
it. That's right, because Yahoo and the media companies also wanted to buy YouTube. Yes. So Shashir says
we were broadly known as Google's first mistake. Well, back to my tee up in the intro, being a
pure play. Investors didn't like this. For a long time, this was a huge knock. I mean, geez,
when we did our episode 10 years ago about YouTube, we said it was a terrible acquisition.
Yes. The thing we haven't talked about, music licensing was really expensive. They were one of the
top revenue sources for the music industry for a long time, maybe even still one of the top
few to the music industry. Yeah, right up there with Spotify. Yep. So, kind of on the product
side of things, early on, as you were saying, the way that you found YouTube is you would see it
embedded on a different site, you would click through, and then you may stick around to watch
something after. But then you'd leave, and your entry point to YouTube again was another embed.
Most sessions did not start on YouTube.com. So you weren't going to YouTube with the idea
of that they'll recommend something to me.
And then even the people who did go to YouTube.com
in this sort of four-year or five-year period
after the acquisition,
90% of that traffic was there to search.
And they just ignored anything
that you recommended to them.
I mean, it takes a long time,
A, to build habits,
and B, to build out the technology
to make any sort of recommendation
or browse or anything good.
Yep.
For first, with related videos,
and then ultimately the feed.
And just for a sense of scale,
there was a report
that estimated that YouTube that year in 2007
consumed as much bandwidth
as the entire internet did
in the year 2000, so just seven years before.
I have an extremely similar stat from Shashir,
which is to later period.
It's 2014, but it's apples to apples,
rather than comparing that 07 to 2000.
He said in 2014, YouTube was 20% of the bits on the internet.
Wow.
I mean, this stat, but especially years,
stat illustrates just how much this thing took off and also just how much more bandwidth video took
up than any other media type on the internet. Yeah. But the long-term play here, obviously,
is the Mary Meeker slide of, yes, video, the reason that it gets consumed so much is this is what
humans want. Right. And you can advertise against it. And Google realized this. I think they were
very smart to, rather than trying to continue investing in Google video to basically say, they got the
lightning in the bottle. They have the consumer brand. They have the attention. Let's just go buy
that thing. And on a expected value basis, if you're making a bet, sure, you could build it on
your own cheaper, but your chance of succeeding is so unlikely relative to buying that thing that
it's actually a deal to get it for $1.65 billion plus the billion that we'll need to invest
every year for a few years to run it in the red. So 2009 is the year where the business really starts
working. Google actually discloses nothing about profitability, but that the ad revenue
tripled in one year in 2009.
2010, 2011, they turned profitable.
There was a report that in 2012, they were estimated to make about $4 billion in revenue,
but roughly break even.
In the 2012, 13, 14, I think they were small, profitable, but profitable.
Then in 2013 to 2015, that time period on the product side, that's when things really changed.
So the North Star really became, users should go to YouTube.
to be entertained for 15 minutes.
And it's our job to do whatever we need to do
to make that true.
And a few things really helped with this.
One was the shift to mobile.
In mobile, and remember, they were a launch partner on the iPhone.
Oh, we're going to get into it.
Okay.
There were a lot more low-intent sessions.
So people who opened the app
rather than clicking through from an embed page.
Low intent being low-intent of watching a specific thing.
Yes.
It's a beautiful thing on mobile.
that you can sort of say, I've got something to recommend to you. And obviously, short form vertical
video like TikTok and YouTube shorts and all that these days is bad on steroids. Mobile also made
it the case that any given user was more likely to be logged in. That way, all the personalization
and all the algorithm stuff works well. They also adjusted their core metric internally away from
views and to watch time. And YouTube was very early to the concept of creator monetization. For a long
time, it was the only place on the internet where creators could make money. Share revenue with
creators. In our old episode, we sort of knocked them. We said, look, this business has to give its
first 50% off the top of any revenue it makes to the creator of the video. That's a way worse
business than, say, Google search ads or Facebook, who, you know, Facebook has influencers on their
platforms, too, all the meta platforms, Instagram. And their rev share, if it's anything, sure isn't
50%, it's probably closer to zero. And YouTube right early on said you're a 50-ish percent
partner, which takes you a decade longer to get profitable, but helps you build that base.
It just creates amazing incentives for people to build businesses and careers on this. I mean,
YouTube is the ultimate instantiation of the Internet to me and the power that it can provide
to individuals to make a living. It abstracts.
the need at all to create or run a business. It really just simplifies it down to make content
that people watch. You will get money for it. You don't have to do anything else in between.
There's a little slight of hand that you did there, David, which is that people watch.
Well, yes. So YouTube internally went back and forth for years on this, and I think we're sort of
in this no man's land that we've landed today. Camp one is, hey, the way to make people most
engaged is by getting them to follow creators and they curate the information sources they want.
Camp two is, in algorithms we trust, it turns out camp two is actually correct, which is
unfortunate. It's a messed up incentive. Most of the time, if you show someone something that
they're subscribed to, or you show someone something that the very smart computers have figured
out you will watch and then watch another video after that, usually the algorithm,
approach is right. And so there is sort of this internal conflict there where they say,
yeah, of course you should subscribe, but your views are only loosely related to how many
subscribers you have. Yep. This is the dark side to the YouTube economy. Yes. But putting that
aside, just this sheer concept of anybody and everybody in the world has a video camera today
can create something. And if it's good and people watch it and the definition of
being the algorithm likes it, you will make money with no other steps in between that can
only happen on the internet. It's pretty interesting because it kind of has these two business
models in core Google land. They have the AdWords business model where they're the first
party media site, each search result page is a form of media, and they run ads on that,
and then they keep approximately 100% of the revenue generated from that ad. The advertiser
pays them, and they share some in the form of traffic acquisition costs that we'll talk about
later, but it's largely a first-party ad. And then they have this other form, AdSense,
and the Google Content Network, when they show display ads on other people's websites,
where they share like 70% of the revenue, most of the revenue, out to the publisher,
the content owner. Right, who actually is the reason why there's an ad there in the first
place. And YouTube was sort of a interesting mix between the two. They were comfortable
and familiar with the idea that we can manage a platform where we actually share a lot of the
revenue with those producing the content, which is interesting. Like, if they had never gone
into the AdSense world and they were purely a search engine, I think it would have probably
been more of a fight to try to do this 50% split with creators. All right, so there's a thing that
I mentioned earlier, this notion of people on mobile are more likely to be logged in than
people who just hit a web page on desktop.
Logged-inness
is essential
for YouTube's success.
That is actually new
to Google.
Logged-inness is not essential to
the effectiveness of a search engine
or even the monetization of a search engine.
We've sort of flirted with this idea.
You can kind of hear it through our episode of
things like Gmail are good
because then you're logged into Google.
But there's not a giant lift.
It's sort of like a nice
To have. Yes. Search, especially on the advertising side, is already so bottom of funnel. Right. The intent is right there. I don't need to know what your demographics are. I know what your intent is.
Right. You search for a shovel. I'm a sell you a shovel. Yeah. That's a stark contrast to YouTube where the whole YouTube flywheel really only works with logged in users. Right. Not just for serving videos and content for you to watch, but also for
advertising. This is how the television advertising ecosystem works. It's about targeting. Why does
Chevrolet advertise on football games? You need demographic data. Right. All right. So David,
are you ready to regrade the acquisition of YouTube by Google? Yes. We got to set the
context of how big it is today. All right. So back in 2016, we had two knocks on YouTube. One is
that it wasn't a destination site. Narrative number two was they only get to keep 50% of their total gross
and then they've got these crazy infrastructure costs and they'll never be able to outrun them.
Well, they sure have solved both of these issues, clearly a destination site, actually more
than anything, a destination app. You open YouTube and an algorithm, we trust.
It's what I do every night before I go to bed. Yes. And, you know, it's a mix of things you're
subscribed to and things you're not, but things YouTube believes will grip your attention
at that moment. On the infrastructure costs, let's just start by unpacking their financials.
So last year in 2024, YouTube ads alone did $36 billion in revenue.
So half goes to creators, they have $18 billion left to play with,
and they've had two decades to figure out how to get their variable cost down for
video hosting, bandwidth, compute for encoding, music licensing, all that stuff.
They now do insane feats of engineering, including doing their own custom silicon to do video encoding.
They also have a whole bunch of crazy things.
that they do, like, change the video encoding that is used depending on how many views the
episode has.
Oh, interesting.
So they do, like, vanilla H-264 when you first upload it, and then when it hits some number
of views, it switches to a more computationally expensive to encode, but then smaller to
distribute format.
And then when you hit another one, when you have like 5 million views or something, then
they do it yet again.
They re-encode the video and make the files up.
even smaller. So they have figured out all these little optimizations to make any given stream
as inexpensive as possible on the sort of variable cost basis.
Brilliant.
On the revenue side, they have gotten much better at selling ads. And most estimates is that
YouTube is actually quite profitable now. On top of the $36 billion in advertising revenue,
Google reported that if you include subscription revenue, so this is things like YouTube
premium, YouTube music, NFL Sunday ticket. They're now doing over 50 billion in revenue. Wow.
So, David, this now makes YouTube the second largest media company by revenue after only Disney.
And Disney has so many other things contributing to that revenue, theme parks, cruise ships,
merchandise, etc. Yes. So YouTube is already bigger than Disney's media business and this year
will likely become bigger than Disney's entire business. The question is,
is how does that revenue figure compare to Netflix?
I'm glad you asked.
Netflix's annual revenue for 2024 was $39 billion.
So they've already eclipsed Netflix.
Wow.
So there you go.
Google doesn't release usage data for YouTube,
but I'm pretty sure that YouTube is the biggest single property on the internet
in terms of minutes spent by humans on it.
It's not the biggest number of users on the internet.
the internet, both Facebook, blue app, and WhatsApp are bigger in terms of total number of
users, but I think YouTube probably dwarfs them in terms of time spent by users on the app.
I think it is the biggest.
I can see that.
Human attention time sync, known to man.
So then the question becomes, how profitable is the 50 billion in revenue?
And officially, we don't know.
But there's these great things called research firms out there that make our jobs that
acquired here much easier.
So storied firm, Moffat Nathanson, published.
a report earlier this year that they think YouTube does about $8 billion in operating income.
$8 billion a year. So I'd want to diff that against their total investment into...
Oh, yeah. Okay, great. This is the way to grade it. Okay, here we go. Yes. Now, we are getting
into grading here. We were landing the YouTube plane. The definitive acquired regrading of YouTube.
So as mentioned earlier, I don't think they ever lost much more than a billion a year. And I think they got
break-even within conservatively five years. So after the $1.7 billion purchase price and the
$5 billion in additional costs, Google paid $6.7 billion, I bet it's closer to five and a half
six, to own something that spits off $8 billion a year in profit today and revenues are growing
10 to 15 percent every year. By the way, also, since I think the theme of this whole episode is
sort of like the dual bottom line
to Google of everything they're doing
of both revenue and profits
and strategic insulation
versus other large tech companies.
Oh, but David, you're forgetting the third
of organizing the world's information.
And the mission, too.
Yeah, yeah, okay, the triple bottom line.
There we go. The triple bottom line.
Google itself,
not including YouTube,
pretty much whiffed on social.
Really, really strategically good for them
that they own YouTube, isn't it?
Now that, you know, meta and TikTok exist.
Well, here's the crazy thing. They whiffed on social. And then what ended up happening was social became YouTube. Yes. Yes. It's the craziest thing. We don't open apps anymore to look at what our friends are posting, a place where Google has no presence. But you open meta's most important property with Instagram and you look at Instagram's most used thing reels or you look at TikTok. And what do you see? You see videos from people you don't know. I mean,
It's crazy that the rest of social media, or almost like user-generated media, pivoted into Google space.
Yeah, this was the big denouement to our meta episode last fall was, hey, social networking, such as the conception of it existed in the mid-2000s and 2010s is dead.
It's gone.
It bifurcated into private messaging and public media.
Yes.
The sort of middle ground of wide group of people you kind of know is.
effectively dead. It's close friends and it's, I don't really care where it came from, but it's
entertaining. Yep. So, you could do a discounted cash flow on this thing that I just gave you,
this call it $6 billion of investment and now $8 billion growing at 10 to 15% every year. But
there's additional strategic value too. In addition to this thing you just said, this
becoming the winner in the short form era, they have the largest corpets of video to train on
for the AI era. Yeah, let's go. So Moffat, Nathan,
and estimated that if this was publicly traded, it would be worth about $500 billion as a standalone
company, and even conservatively, if you sort of take media company comps and do a revenue
multiple, and you discount all the strategic future value, it's still like $200 billion.
So this is officially one of the best acquisitions of all time, and I am raising my grade from
a C to an A plus.
I am obviously right there with you. This is an A plus plus.
Now, it's not really fair to say that it's like turning $6 billion into $500.
That initial 1.7 was largely Google stock that they traded.
So that had real opportunity cost, but it's still ridiculous.
Like I said earlier, a screaming deal either way.
Yes.
All right.
There we go.
We have revised history, corrected the record.
Yes.
All right.
Well, for our next chapter, I motion that we go back closer to Google's core business
of advertising on the web.
And maybe also
stay closer
to acquire its original
raison d'etra of
discussing the greatest acquisitions of all time.
We may as well follow up
YouTube with double-click. But before
we do that, it is time
to talk about one of our favorite
companies, Statsing.
So on our first Google episode,
earlier this year, we talked about how great
the search business model is and how once a
company takes a lead, it's just hard for
anybody else to catch up. But Google did something that kept them in the lead using data to
relentlessly improve the search experience. Yep. Google really was a pioneer in the idea of a
data-driven product culture. They took this to the extreme, with a famous example where they
tested 50 different shades of blue for their links on Google search result pages to find the optimal
one. They also famously leverage user data when people correct their queries to bootstrap the
did you mean autocorrect feature? More recently, they even opted people into AI search via an AB test.
This obsession with testing helped Google find a thousand small product and business wins.
It also helped Google scale its unique culture, where its employees can quickly test and ship
new products and features because they all have access to great tools.
But for a long time, smaller companies didn't have access to the same quality of tools that were
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The smartest new companies like OpenAI, Figma, Atlassian, Brex, Notion, and Anthropic,
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advance experimentation, feature flags, product analytics, session replays, and more,
all backed by a single set of product data.
And using Statsig isn't just about saving engineering time.
it's about bringing that Google-level continuous improvement culture into your company.
Rather than arguing about metric definitions or troubleshooting broken tools,
your team can focus on shipping improvements.
And if you already have your own product data, Statsig is warehouse native,
so they can plug directly into your existing data in Snowflake or BigQuery, whatever.
So if you're interested in giving your product team the same continuous improvement capabilities
that keep Google search ahead, go to Statsig.com slash acquired.
That's S-T-A-T-S-I-G.com slash acquired.
They've got a generous free tier, a $50,000 startup program, and affordable enterprise plans.
Just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
So, double-click.
Well, if buying YouTube in October 2006 for $1.65 billion was a lot.
Google decided to basically double the...
that. A few months later, in April of 2007, when they bought DoubleClick for $3.1 billion in cash,
this time, not stock. And this is on the display ad side of the house. So Google's got two
advertising businesses at this point. There's AdWords when you search and you get the blue
links that show up above the blue links. And then there's the off property or the Google network
ads. And at this point in time, Google just is operating something called AdSense, which is this ad
network that they've started. Yeah. So DoubleClick actually has a fascinating company history
before Google that I did not know. Yeah. Not a hot rising startup like YouTube that they bought
for a couple of billion dollars. Though it once was. Yes. All right. So here's the double click
story. And huge thank you. There's a new book that actually just came out by Ari Paparo. The book is
called yield. DoubleClick was originally founded in 1995. So before Google. Before Google. The founders
were Kevin O'Connor and Dwight Merriman, and their headquarters were in New York City.
The original idea was twofold. One built software that could let advertisers serve ads across
websites. This is called an ad server. And the network of websites and media, the
advertisements when people talk about paid media, it's the advertisements themselves, that
would run. Over the next five years, they end up building and acquiring their way to being the
leading display ad network and ad server. And they went public during this time, right? Yep,
1998. Shining success of the dot com industry. However, dot com crash happens. 70% of double
clicks customers, not only churn, but go out of business. A huge amount of double clicks
advertisers were actually VC-backed startups. Brand dollars hadn't really spread to
the web yet. Like we talked about the digital advertising was so early and so nascent. Yeah, it was
pets.com that was advertising on other dot com properties. Exactly. They're almost levered on the
bubble is probably the right way to think about it. So easy come, easy go. So in 2002,
after they're sort of limped along for a while, they sell that ad network division off for under
$15 million with an M. Wow. So now all they've got like
is the software, the sort of ad server, part of the business. So flash forward to 2004,
they're this kind of sleepy, slow growth company with a shrinking market cap. The ad server,
their software was still widely used, but digital marketing on the web just wasn't actually
having that much spend flow through it. They decided to put themselves up for sale. Google actually
took a meeting to look at it to see if they wanted to buy it. They decided not to, and eventually
they sold it to private equity, two different firms, Helmut and Furman and
Friedman and JMI Management bought it in 2005 for about a billion dollars.
IPO day was double this final price tag that they would sell it to private equity for.
And in many stories, this is kind of the end of the story.
This is the start.
Yeah, it's sort of crazy, given the fact pattern, that you just told us that two years later,
Google is going to buy this thing for $3 billion.
Yes.
So David Rosenblatt becomes CEO.
and he has a very familiar name that all of you will probably recognize who becomes...
Neil Mohan.
Yes, the head of product and strategy at the company, Neil Mohan.
Neil, of course, is the CEO of YouTube today.
Yep.
So from DoubleClick originally.
Many would argue the best thing that Google got in the Double Click acquisition.
You could argue that.
Now, here's the amazing thing.
What happens under the private equity ownership is that they launch a complete
different product, this new thing called an ad exchange, when the concept of an ad exchange is
first invented. Remember, it was very straightforward before this. There was just an ad network
and some software called an ad server. The ad exchange is this sort of brilliant idea that we can
cross-rout demand between ad networks. And at first, what this is sort of used for is like
the remnant or unsold inventory. Oh, we've got some page loads. We don't currently have a buyer
in our ad network forum. So throw them up on this exchange and see
If programmatically, some people will bid on it and we'll get more dollars this month for the same number of page views.
But technically what was going on is it was really sophisticated and it allowed for some crazy stuff to get done.
You could bid in real time, including against the publisher's direct sold ads.
You know, let's say the New York Times has done a specific deal with Ford, then in a real-time basis.
Right.
If somebody else is willing to top Ford, then you can displace them.
Yep, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
Gosh, this sounds a lot like Google, doesn't it?
It really created the modern programmatic display advertising, for better or for worse. That's basically
what happened here. And as a publisher, when you start working with an ad exchange, you can
incorporate multiple different networks, agency trading desks, because this became a big thing with ad
agencies. You can stand up these complex rules engines. Effectively, what happened is you sort
of jumped in front of the ad networks. You almost disintermediated them. You're the lowest level
building block that everything else has to integrate with. And eventually, what started as
this ad exchange that just became used for remnant and unsold,
ultimately becomes the primary way that digital media is bought
on the biggest advertisers with the biggest publishers
and all, of course, bought and sold through these big agencies.
Google is running this little thing called AdSense.
It's kind of four smaller publishers,
and it's very, like, DIY self-serve.
It's almost like a techie utopians version
of how do you run ads on websites, whereas this ad exchange is, let's acknowledge all the complex
realities that exist in all these business relationships, all these purchasing decisions,
the way Madison Avenue has evolved from the Madman era to this moment in time in the early
2000s.
And let's essentially construct fat pipes for money to flow through all this.
And what I mean by that is direct integrations into ad agencies' financial systems.
and the ad agencies control the budgets for all the big brands and all the big dollars that are
flowing. That's exactly right. So if only Google had a way of unlocking and now participating
in these deeply integrated money flows, Google had a few other problems. The way DoubleClick
worked and performed a lot of really fancy stuff like frequency capping to make sure you don't
see the same ad 46 times is third-party cookies. Google was philosophically opposed to using
third-party cookies, so they couldn't do stuff like that, but double-click could.
Google didn't have a lot of these big sales relationships since at the time, again, they're
very obsessed with self-serve webpages, advertisers just log in and upload and transact, so
Google ends up kind of locked out of the best ad inventory.
Advertisers on Google could really only be placed on the long tail of websites, which
advertisers were willing to pay less to appear on those websites.
Again, we're all in the ad sense part of the world, not search ads.
Yes. There's all sorts of things that make them not enterprise grade here.
So Google decided they'd like to buy DoubleClick.
Yes. Well, that's sort of the story out there.
The reality is, think back to how you started when I interjected and I said, gosh, a lot of what Double Click is doing.
It really sounds a lot like what Google is doing, right?
Well, we were talking to Tim Armstrong for research for this episode.
Tim, of course, was head of sales at Google for many years.
And we were asking Tim about double-click, and he was like, well, I was close with the double-click guys.
And I wanted to meet with them here in kind of late 2006, early 2007.
And just so happened, I was going to be in Seattle for some stuff.
And I was emailing with them.
And they were like, oh, you're in Seattle?
Actually, we're in Seattle, too, right now.
We can get together here.
Tim immediately sounds the alarm inside Google to Eric and Larry.
They're in Seattle! Why are they in Seattle? This is a New York-based company. There is only one reason why the double-click guys are going to be in Seattle. And that would be if Microsoft is going to buy the company.
Yep. Now, back to everything we've been talking about all episodes, what is Google absolutely not want to have happen here? Well, one is Microsoft to kneecap them by making changes to Internet Explorer or Windows or whatnot. They basically neutralized that through.
the whole web app, Web 2.0 strategy.
Now the threat is, oh, Microsoft is finally going to wake up
and do what they should have done 10 years ago
and compete with us, build their own search engine.
Right.
Be willing to be an ad-based business.
Their DNA was, yeah, we'll do some ad stuff.
And MSN kind of has to because it's a media business, but...
We sell software.
We sell software.
That's what we do primarily.
And we would never trade our ability to sell software
to make money on dirty ads.
Yep. Well, Microsoft is realizing that for some set of users, Google's actually making more money on any given PC user than Microsoft is. And they're not happy with this and say, fine, we at least just need to be in that game, too.
Yep.
So the negotiations are kind of happening with Microsoft and Double Click. Tim told us this great anecdote where he's invited to present and he still thinks it's like an early stage conversation in the negotiations.
And somehow he gets sent to the wrong floor, the person who is escorting him into the double-click building, sent them to a floor.
And they sort of freak out when the door opens.
They're like, trying to close the door.
Like, please go to the other floor.
And Tim is like, what's going on here?
He steps out.
He runs down the hall, and he sees a conference room full of all the Microsoft people and their accountants and their lawyers.
And he's like, oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
You guys, you're about to decide this deal with Microsoft.
You got it.
So he gets them to hold off.
so he can kick the tires, do his diligence, submit a counterbid.
This is a crazy process that goes back and forth.
Yahoo!
There's a whole presentation series that happens where Yahoo, Microsoft, AOL, and Google are basically all getting the pitch, and Double Click is now showing...
I'm imagining they're all like in an auditorium and Double Click is presenting on stage.
Dude, there was a spreadsheet called yMag.xLS and the reason they've created is they're effective
trying to show in each of these presentations, here's how much incremental money you'll make
if you own DoubleClick and you tie it into your existing ad system. And they're tweaking the
numbers slightly for each one. So Google then submits their LOI for $3.1 billion. And it includes
a clause where they can't shop the deal around during this diligence period. And so the whole
Google team goes to New York. They ran out this big room at a hotel near DoubleClick's office.
and I'm going to read an excerpt from the book Yield.
The company's counsel, this is DoubleClick, checked her Blackberry and held it up for
David Rosenblatt to see.
There was an incoming message from Microsoft's corporate development team.
They were willing to match the offer for DoubleClick, and the message included an email
from Steve Balmer saying that he opened the door for a much higher offer.
Balmer wrote that if the offer match was not acceptable, DoubleClick should simply mark up
the paper to meet its needs and then sign it.
And Microsoft would review and rapidly countersign to close the deal.
with minimal negotiation required.
Without saying so, Balmer was communicating,
here's a blank check, tell me what closes the deal.
Ultimately, a week goes by,
and they're in this period where they can't really respond,
and they're supposed to just kind of proceed with Google.
And a day before the LOI is set to expire,
the double-click team gets an updated term sheet from Google.
The financial terms of the deal are unchanged,
that $3.1 billion,
but now the deal includes what they call a hell-or-high-water clause,
which means that Google was committed to closing the deal without any substantive diligence
or any other conditions. It's just money in the bank. So no more diligence. Double-click just
signs it, $3.1 billion, and the private equity firm turns that $1 billion, which was levered.
There was something like $300 million of equity and $700 million of debt into a $3.1 billion
sale to Google. Then it's over.
Not bad work if you can get it.
Nope.
So this was huge.
for Google. Double-click, bringing it into Google did really help with those fat money pipes,
as I was saying, of dollar flows from ad agencies. Yep. But the biggest thing was,
double-click was the number one player in the space. There was another company,
public company, called a Quantiv that was the number two player. Which Microsoft then bought for
twice as much. They were like, we really wish we had gotten Double-Click, and then within months.
It was the next month, right away. Microsoft turned around and bought,
of Quantiv for $6 billion, so twice the price. But Microsoft getting the number two player versus
the number one player slowed them down. We're heading right into Microsoft's search efforts
with Yahoo and then ultimately Bing and getting into the advertising business. Worth every penny
to Google, even for the sole reason of keeping the premier number one player in the display ad space
out of Microsoft's hands. Yep. Okay, the one thing I will say here, David,
is unlike all those other Google products, Maps, Gmail, YouTube, organizing the world's
information, this is not organizing the world's information and making it universally accessible.
This is we're running an ad business and we want to expand the ad business.
And so we're going to expand and protect our business interests by buying this.
And it's a chess piece on the table that it being in our hands versus other people's hands
is better. That's exactly right. And there's ways that it like systematically advantages you to own the
exchange when you also own the network. And this is only checking the box of strengthening our business
without checking any of the other boxes. And you basically never heard Google executives get up on a
stage where they're inspiring people about the future of the company and talk about basically
anything Double Click is doing. Yes, correct. And, you know, even fast forward today, unlike YouTube,
It's not like this has become a world-dominating thing.
Right.
If you're in the display ads world or you're a publisher,
or this feels like a huge deal,
if you're Google, let's just look at the numbers today.
Google, in total, in 2024, made $350 billion of revenue.
About $200 billion of that is from Google Search.
About 30 billion of that is from Google Network.
This falls under Google Network.
Plenty of which existed before and would have existed anyway in AdSense, regardless.
I don't know about that.
I don't know that Google would have become the dominant player in display ads.
Absent double-clean.
Without buying DoubleClick.
Yeah, I don't think.
Yeah, yeah.
But AdSense was probably doing a billion plus in revenue at the time, would have kept scaling.
So all that to say, like, in the context of Google, this isn't a year.
YouTube. It just doesn't matter that much. Yeah, $200 billion in revenue they make from Search,
where they get to keep 90-ish percent of that, you know, after paying out traffic acquisition
costs. Google Network, they pay out 70 percent, and they only made $30 billion. So if you
start thinking about like gross profit, it's comparing $9 billion to $175-ish billion.
Yep. It's just not that consequential to the story. All right. So speaking of search,
catch us up on how the search business is doing during these years and why Microsoft finally said, like, okay, enough, we got to enter this business ourselves.
Yeah. So we've been talking about kind of the sideshows, like trying to add win to the sales of the web.
And search is cranking on improvements to the core product and revenue is growing up right along with it.
So here's a little timeline to catch us up, oh, 3 to 08.
They start updating the index more often.
So the index starts to feel not quite real time, but it used to be that when you would search,
you would be getting results that were indexed three months ago.
Now the web is feeling a little bit more...
Real-timey.
Recent when you're searching it.
They launch Google Images, Google News, Google Books, Google Scholar.
They launch Google Suggest, which is when it starts auto-completing your searches.
And later they would launch something called Google Instant, which was very cool at the time.
It's actually kind of gone away now, where it would run a completely new search based on every
character you typed and show you the results page.
updated in real time with each next keystroke, which was pretty amazing.
I remember that being so cool when it launched.
Yeah.
In 2005, they incorporate your search history into your results.
So this is when they start doing some personalization stuff with logged in users.
They go from, in 2004, they had $3 billion in revenue.
2005, they have $6 billion in revenue.
So doubled even at that scale.
In 2007, they launched universal search across web, images, video, you know, whatever, maps.
They try to deconstruct your query and understand which of these things are you looking for, rather than they used to basically build a completely separate search engine for each media type and then leave it up to you to decide which thing to go search.
That year, when they launched Universal Search, they do $16.5 billion in revenue.
This 2007 year, this is when they become the largest seller of advertisements in the world.
Not just digital ads, ads.
and digital ads would not overtake traditional media until 2018, as we talked about earlier.
Yeah, I was trying to square this. So I guess that means that the market share that Google has of digital ads is so high that it's bigger than even in the traditional space or the TV space, what any one player has.
Yes. So every year, for the last 18 years, Google has been the number one seller of advertising of any kind in the world.
Wow.
this, I think, helps you understand a little bit what's at stake in the era of AI. I mean, this is literally the trillion or five or ten trillion dollar question is, can Google keep being the number one seller of advertising in the world even through this sea change? We should do a whole episode on that, probably. Maybe we'll say that for next time. But actually, there's some great correlaries with the mobile wave that we're about to talk about. And then just to pull forward a few more search improvements that they would do later in 2009.
that's when they really do some real-time indexing of the web.
2012, they launched the knowledge graph.
So when you search about basically a thing with a Wikipedia page,
you always get the kind of snapshot view on the right-hand side of that entity.
And so all along the way, they're tweaking the algorithm in an attempt to reduce spam.
That's effectively the product changes.
On the people side of things, they really had solidified themselves
as the preeminent computer science research company.
at this point. I mean, if you were to refer in 2008 to like a really smart programmer, you
probably said, oh, they, you know, they're like a Google type engineer. They sort of took
the mantle from Microsoft and had not yet relinquished it to Facebook or later to the
Stripe or Open AI or Anthropic or any of the sort of companies we would talk about in the
future as this like dense concentration of the best engineers. And they had pulled in a lot of
the people from the big research labs that had been collapsing. So you had Jeff Dean and
and Sanjay Gemawatt coming from deck.
David, we did Sanjay a total disservice on the last episode.
A lot of the stuff that Jeff did, and of course he became sort of a Google executive,
Jeff and Sanjay peer program together.
Yes, there's an amazing New Yorker article that was published long ago
about their friendship and career partnership and everything that they accomplished together.
Yeah, we'll link to it in the show notes.
And basically, if you look at any big research paper about giant Google infrastructure stuff
that was launched from, I don't know, 2002-ish, maybe even earlier, through the 20 teens,
Jeff and Sanjay are either the two authors or two of the five authors.
I mean, it's amazing how much stuff these two guys invented.
They also got Bill Corrin and Rob Pike from Bell Labs.
You had Xerox Park and IBM's labs were sort of losing prominence.
And Google's just sucking in all this generational, heavy-hitter, computer science,
architecture, systems programmers from all of those.
And so I think that's sort of how I would describe where a lot of the technical breakthroughs are really coming from, or at least the culture of technical breakthroughs.
We talked about these incredible products, incredible innovations, development of the whole concept of a web application.
But that was coming from these people that were coming into the company who were just, like you say, generational talents.
Speaking of, that was very convenient for a couple things that they needed to start doing in 2008.
Namely, launching their own web browser, and then shortly thereafter, launching their own mobile operating system.
It's astonishing that they did both of these things.
In the same year.
And this isn't like, oh, I'm going to start a browser the way that you can start a browser today.
I mean, all these AI companies are launching browsers.
Yeah, they're using chromium.
Right.
This is a giant engineering undertaking.
You need amazing architects.
And this is equivalent to Dave Cutler doing Windows NT.
I mean, it was earth-shattering when Google launched Chrome.
Or everything Jeff Dean and Sanjay did in the early days of Google.
Yes.
Yeah.
And when I say people launching web browsers today are using chromium,
chromium, of course, is the open-source version of Chrome.
Yeah.
that Google just gives away for free to anybody.
That didn't exist.
They had to build it.
So, in February of 2008,
the shoe that Google had been fearing would drop for many, many years,
finally does drop,
which is Microsoft is officially going to enter the search business.
They make a bid, Microsoft does, to buy Yahoo for $44 billion.
The giant has finally woke.
up. Fortunately for Google, they get a little bit of a reprieve because Jerry Yang turns it down.
So dumb. In one of the worst corporate decisions of all time, because just two years later, Bing, after Microsoft would launch Bing the next year in June of 2009, Bing would take over powering Yahoo search for a deal that paid Yahoo one billion dollars versus the 44 that two years earlier Microsoft was willing to pay for the whole company.
Then Yahoo would sell itself to Verizon for...
Like three, I think, something like that?
Something like that, yeah, single-digit billions.
Yes.
So, Google, though, knew this day was going to come eventually.
And fortunately, by this time in 2008, Google had its competitive response all ready, ready to go, which was Chrome.
And they had actually been working on improving the state of browsers for years.
Oh, yes, they had.
The story of Chrome goes all the way back.
back to 2001.
Larry and Sergey wanted to build a web browser in 2001
for this very reason that we've been talking about the whole episode.
All of Google rested on...
I didn't realize that.
Internet Explorer.
And also, I mean, it was Larry and Sergey.
Of course, they wanted to build a web browser.
It's the most Google thing.
Why wouldn't we build our own web browser?
Right.
But it was Eric who said in 2001, no,
we can't do this now.
We can't poke the bear right now.
Like Google is too young, too vulnerable.
Calls like this are why Larry and Sergei brought in Eric.
Eric, yes.
The actual quote from Eric at the time this is in the Plex is,
I don't want to moon the giant in 2001.
It's a very Eric Schmidt quote.
But that doesn't mean that Google isn't preparing for this.
Instead, what they do is they decide that they are going to become the primary
major benefactor for the new Mozilla Foundation and what would become Firefox.
Mozilla was the non-profit organization that was founded and spun off from Netscape when AOL bought Netscape.
Are they a funder? Are they actually just like giving money?
Well, I think at first it probably was like with grants like giving money.
Because again, this is strategically important for Google. But then once Firefox actually gets
released by Mozilla and deployed out there, the way Google starts supporting Mozilla and Firefox
is through paying traffic acquisition cost to them to be the default search in the Firefox
browser. Spoiler, like they do to Apple for Safari today to the tune of like $20 billion a year.
Yes.
Firefox is where this all starts with Mozilla.
Actually, traffic acquisition costs originated before Mozilla because it's a
effectively the same thing that they were doing with software vendors to include Google Toolbar.
Right.
And so I think the mechanism of payment over time shifted to more of a rev share.
My understanding now is that they share some of the revenue they generate from queries that originate
searches that happen in the browser.
Exactly.
Which is why it ends up being kind of variable year to year.
But yes, Google has a long history of paying for distribution.
of their search engine, and the new form that it is now taking is the Mozilla Firefox browser.
Yep, starting with Toolbar. So this goes on for a couple years.
And by the way, I should say Google becomes a giant contributor of source code to Firefox.
Well, I'm going to get into this. So a couple of years, Google's paying Mozilla for default search and Firefox,
basically funding Mozilla after a little while.
Google decides that they're going to hire some of the key Firefox engineers at Mozilla to come and work at Google directly.
But they position this as like essentially this is the same thing.
We are still funding Mozilla and Firefox just like, you know, you're Mozilla.
You can't give these employees, these engineers stock options like you're a nonprofit.
How about instead they do the same thing that they're doing, which is working on Firefox, they'll just come and work here at Google.
And we'll pay their salaries and they'll get Google stock options.
Otherwise, they're going to get poached by all these tech companies, et cetera.
Yeah, fascinating.
You can see how this makes sense.
This team that comes over from Mozilla into Google becomes the core of a new, quote, product client group within Google.
Meaning of this being products on clients, i.e. installed applications on PCs, not the web apps that the rest of Google is doing.
and the leader of this group, Google Hires from McKinsey, in 2004, Sundar Pichai.
Oh, I did not realize that that's where Sundar came from.
Yep.
Well, again, all of this is very strategic because if you did someday want to build your own web browser...
Now you've got the bench of talent. They're employees.
So there's a quote from Eric Schmidt in theplex.
This was very clever on Larry and Sergei's part.
Because of course these people doing Firefox are perfectly capable of going and doing another free web browser.
So this group is sitting there within Google for a couple of years, almost like a latent sleeper cell within Google.
They're just ready to activate as soon as the Microsoft threat becomes real.
And the way I heard it was a lot of people are working on Google Gears, which is this browser extension that allows for offline functionality.
they've built the Google Web Toolkit
to make web application development
even more advanced, even more sophisticated.
And at some point, they kind of lost faith
that Firefox was going to keep the pace
and that Firefox was going to stay
as high quality of a browser as they needed it.
And, of course, they had some divergent technical ideas,
like different architecture ideas
for how a browser should function that we'll talk about.
I think all of these things are true.
However, having...
your own browser when Microsoft does launch Bing, hugely, hugely, hugely important. Imagine
if 90% of Google happened on Internet Explorer and all of a sudden Microsoft launches Bing.
Right. There's no amount of money suddenly that you could pay Microsoft where they would keep you
as the default search engine because they just want all the traffic to go to Bing because they now
have a great way to monetize. Absolutely not. Bing, default search engine, done. Right.
And the thing that, of course, Microsoft would fail to realize with Bing is you can't be second place in search.
Right.
The most liquid auction will always win, and Google has already run away with the search ads auction liquidity.
And so traffic on Google searches will forever be worth more than traffic on the second place browser.
Sure.
Doesn't mean that that battle wouldn't be hugely damaging to Google.
if they didn't have their own web browser.
So 2006, they finally decide,
okay, it's time to start work on Chrome.
Yep.
And also, it's clear web apps,
JavaScript, Ajax, very important thing,
and Internet Explorer isn't keeping up with the technology.
Yeah.
So there's two killer features,
arguably maybe three,
that they're going to bake into the Google browser.
Ooh, I've got six.
Oh.
So I'm curious which ones you don't think are important.
Okay, I'll go through my three
and then let's see what else you have to add.
Okay, great.
Number one, most important,
it is going to have a super fast,
super modern, super performant
JavaScript virtual machine called V8.
Yep.
That is going to run big web apps fast and stably.
We're the Ajax company, baby.
We got to speed up the J.
We are the Ajax company.
That's right.
Two, web apps crashed a lot back in the day.
They don't so much anymore, but they used to crash a lot.
And Larry has this quote when they're deciding that they should roll out Chrome.
And he kind of explains, we have found the web-based service delivery model to have significant advantages.
You don't say.
But it also comes with its own set of challenges, primarily related to web browsers, which can be slow, unreliable, and unable to function.
offline.
There you go.
And so before Chrome, this is impossible to remember now.
But if you had a tab or a window open and running a web app and that web app crashed, it took
down your whole browser.
Yep.
Everything that you had open, gone.
Tabs were not their own processes.
Nope.
So each tab is going to be a separate process on your machine.
So if the web app running in one tab crashes, all it takes down is that one tab.
And it made sense.
that before this, they weren't their own process because, one, tabs were kind of a new thing.
But two, web applications were websites. The notion of web applications was only really four-ish years
old. So those are my big two. I suspect one of yours is WebKit. I'm not including WebKit here
because that was an Apple innovation that they borrowed. I'll let you talk about that in a second.
I don't have anything more to say on that. It was the best rendering engine.
Yes. So let's say that's three. And then my sort of three and a half is
the design. So, of course, the web browser ultimately comes to be called Chrome, which is ironic. Chrome
is a reference to all the stuff in a web browser, the toolbars, the nav bar, etc., that take up
space around the content. The idea with Chrome is, and the Google web browser is going to be
minimal Chrome as little as possible. It's just about the content. Let the web and the web apps
shine. Yes. Okay. When you said UI, I thought you were going to say this. My fifth is the
Omnibox.
Ah, yes.
Originally, there was just the URL bar, and then when search became the killer app of the
web, there's a second little input box that is for search on the right side.
So we had that awkward teenage years where browsers had the URL bar on the left,
and then the search on the right.
And it's kind of clean to think about it on its own, because now that we understand that
is sponsored, that I think for the longest time, that was not in the public psyche,
that whatever search engine appeared in that box in the right-hand corner was paying for
that placement. That was sort of nice because you type in the URL bar and that's your organic
typing. And then the other one is your, I'm willing to give a kickback to Google, probably,
but it could also be Bing, could be Yahoo, could be whoever. Google is correctly from a user
experience perspective, but also just think about their core business model is like, the right
design for web browsers is that if you don't type in a URL, it should just search.
Just one bar. Why have two bars?
We imagine that, generating a whole bunch more page views on search results pages
and a whole bunch more opportunities for our advertisers to reach your eyeballs.
But I will say they were also correct from a user experience perspective.
The fact that URLs ever leaked to the public is a mistake.
That is letting an implementation detail of the technology.
It's an accident of history that consumers type...
HTTPS colon slash slash. Are you kidding?
kidding me. Consumers never should have known the phrase HTTP. They should just type New York
Times. Yes. Which AOL tried to do, AOL keywords. Mm, yeah. So this is effectively leaning
into that idea. You can use this box for typing a URLs, but like really what you use this box
for is kicking off the Google search. So brilliantly aligned with their business model. All right.
So that's what I got. What else do you have? That's not on my list. That's five. And then lastly,
sandboxing. Each tab is a sandboxed environment. This prevented a ton of malware. This
was like a big breakthrough in computer security where anything that was operating in that tab
was in its own sandboxing couldn't be accessed maliciously. Yeah, that's, I guess, gosh,
remembering back, I mean, before Chrome and modern web browsers, browsing the web was like a
security threat to your PC, right? Yep, that's exactly right. Great point. Okay, so they start work
officially on this in 2006. They launch it in early September 2008, like a week before,
before Lehman goes down. This is wild. I remember that because I remember sitting in North Carolina
at my Cisco office and I remember reading the Chrome comic, which I actually just read
a couple nights ago for this episode, this like amazing web comic at the same desk where I read
the news about the great financial crisis and the world falling apart and Lehman Brothers collapsing.
Wow. So they launched it early September 2008 with the way this is so Google, the way they
decide to launch it is they hire the famous comic artist Scott McLeod to illustrate a digital
comic book as like a introduction to Chrome explaining what it is and like a user manual in a comic
book form. And it's written for this weird half user who's like kind of technical, but you don't
need to be a programmer necessarily. It's written sort of for the tech enthusiast who can
understand process independence, understand
sandboxing, understand V8 and the
JavaScript speed up, but it's not
written for the general public.
Yep. But that was exactly the right
seed crystal user base to get Chrome
into. Yeah. It's written for the
slash dot reader. The kind of people who are going to go
home for Thanksgiving in a couple months
and install it on all their families' computers
and say, you need to stop using Internet Explorer
right now for all of these reasons, Ben,
that you just listed, probably security being number
one amongst them. This actually was me back in the day. Like, I'm going to go home. I'm going to
install Chrome on my parents' computers so that they don't get hacked and lose their financial
information, et cetera. Yep. Within 18 months, they got 40 million users. Then, let's see,
they launched it in 2008. By 2010, they had 70 million users. Then 2012, they had 200 million users.
Actually, what happened is it destroyed Firefox's market share. I think the launch of
Chrome and the peak of Firefox are right around the same time. And then after that, then it really
started eating away at Internet Explorer's market share. And today, aside from mostly iPhones, but Apple
devices running Safari, it is the browser. I mean, to say it worked is like the understatement
of the century. I mean, it totally liberates Google from Internet Explorer and Microsoft.
When Chrome launched in 2008, Internet Explorer had almost 70% market share of browsers,
and Firefox had most of the rest.
Two years later, like you said, Chrome had passed 100 million users.
By 2012, so four years after launch, Chrome and Internet Explorer are now tied for market share with about 30% each.
So Internet Explorer has gone from 70% down to 30%.
And this is both Chrome on the desktop side, but you're now also well into the rise of mobile.
And so Apple's mobile Safari is now becoming huge.
And Google's Android that we're going to talk about in a sec is becoming huge.
Two years after that in 2014, Chrome is now the clear leader with 40% market share.
Internet Explorer is down to 15%.
So it's over.
It's over.
And Internet Explorer is basically dead at this.
point, and today it truly is dead.
2013-14?
Yeah, 2013-14.
Today, it's not even close.
Chrome has almost 70% market share, according to Cloudflare.
Including iPhones, which all run Safari, default.
Right.
Safari, in aggregate, across mobile and desktop of mobile is by far the biggest share of
Safari market share, is about 20%.
So Chrome has 70%.
Safari has 20%.
There's 10% left.
You know, I think Microsoft, I don't know, has a couple single-digit percentage points.
Talk about flipping the tables.
Chrome was massive.
And it was just better.
It was so much better.
And it really kicked off this amazing era for the web between Apple needing to then sort of play catch-up and leapfrog.
In a lot of years, it was actually faster than Chrome, and they would go back and forth.
And it really spurred Apple, who was already a steward of WebKit, and they sort of
have had their own competitive response to Microsoft after Steve Jobs hated the fact that he
had to keep shipping i.e. as his best option on Mac. Because that was part of the Microsoft
Apple deal, right when Microsoft saved Apple with the investment was Internet Explorer will
become default on the Mac. So Safari was created for that. But over the years, you know,
Apple's incentives, especially post-Iphone, were not to make it so web apps could be great.
Apple's incentives were to make it so native mobile and desktop applications could be great.
And so Google really pushing the envelope in the web's capabilities and what a modern browser could do
forced this like good for the world race between Apple and Google to both make better browsers.
I don't think it is an exaggeration to say that Chrome kept the web alive.
Yeah.
As a viable platform for applications.
Yep.
I mean, Microsoft certainly didn't have.
an incentive to do it in the business model they were in at the time, and Apple doesn't.
They had every incentive not to. Right. Who in the world least wants the web to be a viable
application platform, Microsoft? Right. At that point in time, Apple now, ironically. So there's
one more amazing, delicious part of the Chrome story, which is, do you remember the Google Chrome
frame? Google Chrome Frame was a plugin.
for Internet Explorer
that replaced IE's JavaScript engine
and pulled in the Chrome V8 JavaScript engine
and I think also WebKit.
Whoa.
And so for all the corporate users
who couldn't install a new app
of America and the world
who were stuck with Internet Explorer.
This is the only reason that I.E.
hung on to MarketShare for so long
was just...
Right.
Lockdown PC.
For all those poor souls, Google was there for you with the Google Chrome frame plugin
that let you run Chrome quality web apps within Internet Explorer.
Amazing.
All right.
So I have a question for you on Chrome before we finish this story.
Why make Chromium open source?
The answer that I've read to that is mostly about the Google culture.
and trying not to be, like, too evil about it.
Yeah, I would buy that.
Yeah.
They're like an open source company.
Like, it's in their bones to contribute to open source.
There's a thin business reason I can think of
of why they would want to make it open source.
Well, the reason I can think of is, like,
it doesn't need to be closed source.
They make their money from searches.
Right.
That's the, like, it can't hurt.
Here's the way it could help.
At first, I was thinking, well, wait, Google,
Google wants to own as many of the browsers that its searches originate from as they can,
so they don't have to pay out distribution costs in the form of traffic acquisition.
So if someone takes chromium and then builds a better browser, it's kind of bad because
now you have to pay that browser maker.
But in practice, as long as it's not Microsoft and as long as it's more fragmented,
that's probably a trade they're perfectly happy with.
If they need to go and split some rev share and pay, you know, someone who makes some variant of Chrome based on chromium, and that gets really big and it gets 30% of the market, great. Google's delayed because it's not Microsoft.
I mean, look, except for traffic acquisition cost, Google's incremental gross margin on search revenue is like 98% or something like that.
They're still going to be an 87% gross margin business.
Because the whole point of this was to prevent a existential risk.
And so if they have to do some light rev sharing, even in their worst-case scenario where someone builds a successful thing based on their open-source project.
Oh, so horrible. We go down to 87% gross margin.
Right, right. It's still perfectly acceptable, which actually may be the way it plays out if any of these new AI browsers work out.
Yeah. Maybe.
Well, not sure any of these AI browsers would be willing to like Google to pay them to be the default.
Right, big chess game to consider there.
Yes.
That is the one catch
Is the owner of the browser
Still has to be willing
To accept the payment from Google
Yes
I have one analogy
For all of this
That is a little far afield
But I think is actually the right way
To think about this
Okay
Layed on me
Walt Disney
Creates Disneyland
Goes great
Very handcrafted,
curated
Autour-driven thing
But ultimately
He has to play
within the rules of things like
city government. They go
big and get a huge
plot of land in Florida to build
Walt Disney World.
It would be nice if we controlled
our underlying foundation
a little bit more. So they build
their own government district
around the park.
Right. And they say, we make the rules
here.
It's not totally dissimilar.
Yep. I've been reflecting
a little bit on like why, basically from 1998 onward, Google's biggest threat was Microsoft.
And not because of Bing, not because of building advertising, because of this kind of destabilizing
thing. There's sort of a fine point on it, which is that spiritually Microsoft was the platform
of the PC era. And with this platform shift, it would be like very convenient to just be like,
oh, Google's the platform of the web era. But even though Google is the platform.
company of the web era. They aren't necessarily the ones building the platform. Right. Yeah, yeah. They still
existed at Microsoft's pleasure. And no one owns the web as a platform. So there's this kind of funky thing where
Microsoft built and owned Windows and then dominated the PC era because of that. Google operates
a search engine that generates advertising revenue. They don't charge anyone for anything. They benefit
from the web's growth. And so they're doing this like strange indirection. Yeah, it's the ecosystem
building exercise. Yeah, exactly. They're trying to build the ecosystem. They're trying to be the
steward of the open web as a platform. And they like put their finger on the scale where they
need to and take a little bit more control and ownership like with Chrome or like with some of
these standards bodies to push the web forward to make sure that the place where they live,
their neighborhood, the web is in good shape. But it's not their platform in the way that it was
Microsoft's platform in that era.
All right. Maybe the Disney World analogy is even better than we gave it credit for a minute ago.
That's sort of, I don't know. It's a little bit loose, but that's what I've been kicking around.
I like it. I like it. Well, no doubt, Chrome was a huge success. Hell, Sundar becomes the CEO of
the company. No better sign of how successful it was than that. Right. It shored up their future.
We could do a classic acquired what would have happened otherwise just for a minute or two here.
what if Google didn't launch Chrome? Let's say Bing launches in 2009 and there is no Chrome and
Microsoft still has 70% share and will for a while. Yep. And they make Bing the default. Let's
see, mobile would get big three, four years later in the 2012-ish time frame. Yep, still small.
So they basically would have like four years of 70% of people using browsers on any devices being
defaulted to Bing. Now, obviously, a lot of people would still want Google. They were used to it.
They'd switch back. But like, I don't know, man, defaults are powerful. Defaults are powerful.
I think you're right. This is why Google pays Apple $20 billion a year.
Yeah. To your point, maybe without Chrome, Bing would have been a serious competitor to Google.
There is no more important distribution point for search than the web browser.
It is the way to monetize a browser. Basically, the single way to monetize a browser.
Yep.
Which, let's make this relevant to today and stop dancing.
If the DOJ's ruling is that Google has to divest Chrome,
there is one way that Chrome is a business,
and that is getting paid by Google to drive traffic to Google as a search engine.
It's the only way to operate a business of a browser.
And, like, maybe in the AI era, it's the AI company having it drive traffic,
but it's the same exact thing.
And so one of two things has to be true.
Google owns Chrome or someone else owns Chrome and then Google pays them.
But the thing you definitely can't make illegal, or I don't really understand what the goal is if you make it illegal, is if you say they both can't own Chrome and they can't pay web browsers to drive traffic.
Chrome has no potential of being a business if that's the case.
Yep.
So Chrome, huge win.
In fact, it's so much of a win that after a couple of years, Google starts thinking, well, gosh, maybe we,
should build Chrome into an operating system in and of itself. Let's go attack Windows. Let's take
it to Microsoft where it really hurts. Chrome OS, you know, it became successful in schools and
education. Yeah, Chromebooks. Yeah, Chromebooks have major market share there, but it's not a major
player in the overall PC operating system market. It is wild how much the PC computer operating
system market is still dominated by Windows. That has never changed. You and I,
I live in this world where, like, everybody uses a Mac. Mac has like 15% market share.
Yeah.
Windows has like 70% market share of computer operating systems.
Well, speaking of operating systems, it's time.
I think it's probably time to talk about Google's big one.
Yes.
Which is actually the biggest operating system in the world.
Over three billion active Android devices now.
Totally freaking wild.
that they bought for $50 million.
Well, that's a red herring.
They've invested so much more.
But just to make the point, it is hit after hit after hit.
These things are not predicated on Google's distribution.
If you're a company that launches a new widget and you can just distribute it with your old widget, it's not that impressive when your new widget gets dominance.
But Google Chrome, I mean, they could.
do a little thing, and they did push it on Google search pages. But they managed to get
a lot of distribution just by being a great product on the market with viral adoption that
everyone told their friends to use. And it was the David Rosenthal's going home to Thanksgiving
that were sort of like the seat of it. And then within three or four years, they just ran the
table. And it's not just Chrome. Gmail was that way. Google Docs and spreadsheets were that way.
I mean, Maps was that way. It's everything. Everything. All of these things are independent
great products that became dominant on their own merits, just like Google Search did.
Yes, I 100% agree. And also helped by the fact that they were all free.
Yes. Yes, fair. And massively subsidized, at least in the early years before they were able to be
businesses on their own by the old money printing machine in the basement of Google.
Good old Uncle Edwards. Yes. But before we tell the Android story, now is a great,
great time to thank one of our favorite companies, Versel.
Yes, we have talked throughout the season about Versel has become the infrastructure backbone for modern web and AI development, highly relevant to this episode, powering companies like PayPal, Ramp, Under Armour, Notion, Runway, Cursor, and many more.
Today, though, we want to spotlight V0, which is VERS, which is VERSL's AI app builder that goes one step further and programs, designs, iterates, and deploys full-stack web app.
applications entirely for you.
V0 is a chat bot that looks like Claude or ChatGPT or Gemini, except that when you give it a
prompt, it will go build an entire fully functional website or application entirely for you.
No engineering or web design skills are required.
You don't need to look at a single line of code or mock up a wireframe, so a marketer can
stand up a product landing page or a small business can generate a home page in a contact form
or a creator can spin up an independent content hub, anything.
Verssel loves to paraphrase the famous line from Pixar's Ratatoui that, quote, everybody can cook,
which is an especially fun Easter egg for us since Pixar was our very first acquired episode.
And the numbers behind VZero are wild.
It now has 4 million users, so PMs, marketers, creators, founders, teachers, students, all building real production-ready applications on this thing.
And speaking of production, every single V0 app you generate can be deployed to production instantly with Versel,
because V0 itself entirely runs on VARCEL's platform.
So you go from prompt to full-stack deployment with Zero setup
using the same secure, scalable, automatic infrastructure
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It's the perfect example of Vursell being customer zero for their own products.
They're using their own AI cloud to power their own AI products.
So if you've got an idea that you want to launch,
whether you're a seasoned developer or someone who's never written a line of code,
go to Vercell.com slash acquired.
that's V-E-R-C-E-L.com slash acquired, and try it out.
Build something real and just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
All right, Android.
So, Google's office spaces are legendary.
The first one, of course, being Susan Mugeski's garage in Mountain View company's first office.
And then today, the Googleplex, the old SGI, Silicon Graphics,
campus in Mountain View. In between, Google had another office for a couple years in downtown
Palo Alto at 165 University Avenue. Would also later be the office that PayPal was started in.
Oh, really? Very lucky building, yeah. August 1999, when Google moved out of that office,
do you know who moved in?
Based on the direction this is going, is it danger?
Yes, it is.
Yes.
Danger.
The company started by Andy Rubin.
And Andy, of course, have been an engineer at Apple,
and then left Apple with a group of rebels.
I don't know, were they rebels,
that went to go start General Magic.
General Magic, of course, legendary failed.
Startup in Silicon Valley in the early 90s, basically was trying to create the iPhone, just 15 years too early.
Yep.
After General Magic, after it falls apart, he starts Danger.
Now, Andy's initial idea for Danger was he wanted to make a wireless version of the QCat scanner.
What is a QCat scanner?
This was a device that plugged into your computer that looked like a cat, but it scanned barcodes.
And so Andy's idea was, okay, well, man, all this general magic stuff we were trying to do, that was too far ahead.
What if we think simpler and we just make a wireless version of this to scan barcodes?
Okay, not a big idea.
His first employee at Danger, a guy named Hiroshi Lockheimer, convinces him that, hey, actually, you know, a couple of years gone by, maybe we should revisit this general magic stuff.
Wait, Hiroshi was with him at Danger?
He was the first employee.
I did not know that.
Yep.
Yes, he was.
I mean, of course, is instrumental in the Android story later.
I did not realize the two of them were at danger together, too.
I spoke to Hiroshi in research.
He told me these stories.
Great, great guy.
Hiroshi led Android and Chrome at Google for many, many years, and would be the authority on this.
So, Herosi's like, hey, hey, maybe let's revisit this general magic stuff.
And that led to danger building the sidekick.
and launching it in partnership with T-Mobile, this thing was amazing.
That thing was so sick. I was jealous of all my friends that had one.
It was a messaging-focused, sort of rich application cell phone.
I think it was, along with BlackBerry's, the first vision of a cell phone
where the primary thing you do on it is not talk to somebody.
Is messaging.
These things were freaking awesome.
They were really big with celebrities.
I think it was a plot of an entourage episode at some point in time.
So they end up selling this company to Microsoft, right?
Yes.
Microsoft does end up acquiring the company, but not until 2008, which is the same year that Android launches.
Andy actually had left Danger in 2003 and started a new company, Android.
Which in the earliest days, it was kind of like an open source competitor to effectively Blackberry software.
Yes, in its earliest earliest days.
The first version of Android the company,
remember I was talking about point-and-shoot cameras
and digital cameras back in the YouTube section?
Yeah.
Was actually to build a cross-platform open-source operating system
for point-and-shoot digital cameras.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, that was Andy's vision, was like,
oh, hey, these point-and-shoot devices,
like hundreds of millions of consumers have them now.
What if there were a powerful operating system?
Could that be a Trojan horse to get an operating system?
system, you could sort of imagine it. Right. If cameras became phones instead of phones becoming
cameras, then yes. Yep. Exactly. But pretty quickly it does become clear that phones are going to
become cameras. So good thing is, though, the software they're writing still works just as well
on phones. So Andy Pivots the company and has the delivery vector shift from cameras to
smartphones. And at the time, the smartphone market such that...
it existed. And it did exist. BlackBerry Windows Mobile? Well, yeah, so here are the players.
Basically, phone companies either were full stack, like Apple and the iPhone is today, where they
made the phone and the operating system. So that was Nokia. And then the big player,
in the smartphone market at least, was BlackBerry, made their own software, made their own
devices huge in the enterprise market. Or you did have OEMs, device makers, who made devices, and
then they bought an operating system either from POM, which made their own devices, but then also
started selling the operating system to other vendors, or the big player was Microsoft with Windows
mobile.
And this was a license model.
As we talked about in our Microsoft part two, this was you pay Microsoft single digit dollars,
and you get an operating system, and then you build the phone stuff on top of the operating
system. Exactly. And this was a good business for Microsoft. Obviously, it wasn't as big as the
desktop market, but you can totally understand why this is their strategy. We are the main
desktop operating system provider. This is our business bottle there. Let's just do the same
thing here. It seems to be working. And as far as the phone manufacturers, the OEMs, and the
carriers are concerned, things are also pretty good.
These phones that they're making, they can't really do that much, but because of that, they don't actually cost that much to make.
And the consumers, meanwhile, are paying through the nose for these things.
You have a smartphone on a carrier contract.
You're paying like $100 a month.
And they don't consume that much data either because they're not that capable.
Everybody is fat and happy.
Yeah.
So into this morass that also Steve Jobs is, of course, looking at the same thing and saying this sucks.
enter Andy and Android and he goes around and he starts pitching the phone manufacturers
and the carriers hey stop buying an operating system from Microsoft or from POM I'll give you a
great one for free and oh by the way it's going to be open source and there'll be third party
applications that can be written to it and these devices will be super powerful the ecosystem's
like no I don't want this one
There's just no way in hell that...
A startup.
AT&T or Verizon is going to work with a little rinky-dink startup
that's valued at like $10 million and has eight employees.
There's billions and billions of dollars at stake here.
But the other part of it, too,
I think the reason that the smartphone market had stagnated for so long was this.
Everybody was happy.
Right.
It's a non-priority to upset the Apple Cart.
Right.
It's almost like a version of enterprise software.
IT, right? The users don't like it, but the users aren't actually the customers here. It's the carriers who are the customers. Yep. So 2005 rolls around, Andy's now two years into the company with Android. He's managed to convince HTC, the Taiwanese manufacturer, to make a prototype with him. He's showing it to carriers. He's showing it to other OEMs. But for all the reasons we just discussed, it's tough sledding out there. The company,
he's running out of money. As Andy is going around trying to gin up investment for another
round, he ends up meeting with Larry Page. Larry immediately is like, forget raising another round.
What if I buy you right now? So July 2005, Google buys Android for $50 million. $50 million for
Android. Oh my goodness. But of course, that's a fallacy because they would pour billion
in development.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They put billions and say, yeah, yeah, yeah, oh, I know, I know, I know.
But, like, to your point, this episode, Google is the hit factory here.
This is the hit parade.
Right.
The correct way to think about Android is that Google built it in-house with a little kick in the pants from this startup kind of got far enough along with the idea that forced them to do it now.
But they needed the kick in the pants.
Yes.
Because why was Larry so excited?
Why did they buy Android right away?
Eric and Larry and Sergey, they all knew that they were late to mobile.
Here we are.
It's now mid-2005.
Hmm.
We're 18 months away from the reveal of the iPhone.
Apple and Google are very close.
Why do you think they knew that they were late?
I'm sure they were starting to get wind from Apple of what was going on.
That's true.
Eric's on the board at this point, right, of Apple?
He's not yet on the board, but he's about to join the board.
But the companies are very close.
Okay.
There's that.
But even, let's say, they don't know about the iPhone.
BlackBerry is a thing.
Yep.
Big adoption.
Yep.
Smartphones, you know, and even Windows mobile, as bad as it was,
prove that there is demand.
There is clearly consumer demand for this.
Right.
They had a version of Google.com for these devices to access,
and they could see the traffic.
And they really knew it, especially from Maps.
Google Maps on mobile devices, smartphones was a killer application.
Google is maintaining, I kid you not,
350 different versions of Google Maps for Mobile
for all the just sea of phones out there.
And so, like, they know.
We have built our local government district
on the desktop around our Disney World,
and, uh-oh, looks like mobile needs a district too.
Yeah.
So, sure, you know, like, you're right.
They would have done this anyway.
But they were starting to feel already like, oh, shoot, we should have started this two years ago.
Buying Android kickstarts things.
And, like, from the Google perspective, thank God they did because we're 18 months away from the iPhone launch.
And if they are starting from a cold start in January 2007, good luck.
We're not telling this story right now.
If they don't buy Android and they don't get started, basically in the month that they did, this market belongs to Microsoft.
Apple.
No, Microsoft.
Oh, why do you say Microsoft?
There's going to be two players in this market.
I see what you're saying.
There's going to be a fully integrated player, which Apple was going to be,
and then there's going to be an OEM plus licensed operating system,
and the model would have just been that Microsoft sells operating systems,
a mobile operating system.
Great point.
To the OEMs, who were freaking out that Apple was going to run away with it.
Great point.
So now, back to Android and why Android was especially so attractive,
Andy already had the right business model for Google.
It's just that as Android, the startup,
OEMs and carriers are like giving it to me for free.
Like that makes you less attractive to me.
But now all of a sudden within Google,
they can run the playbook that they run everywhere.
They go the carriers, the OEMs.
It's funny how giving it away for free as a startup is counter signal.
It makes you look desperate.
But if you're Google, it's like,
oh, they must have a really good plan here.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So they start work on Android as part of Google.
here in summer of 2005, and the plan initially is that there are going to be two versions
of Android. There's a prototype and a device that'll be more near-term to launch called the
quote-unquote sooner, sort of the more Blackberry-like device, not a touchscreen device.
And then there was a longer term advanced research project codenamed the dream for a touch screen, a smartphone device.
Summer of 2006, that next year, Eric Schmidt joins the Apple board.
Ah, sees how far along and how good the iPhone is.
Uh-huh. And then January of 2007, the iPhone is revealed in the green.
Greatest corporate presentation keynote of all time.
Yeah.
Eric is in the freaking keynote.
Steve Jobs invites Eric Schmidt on stage.
And Android hasn't been announced yet, right?
Nope.
Nope.
Nobody knows about Android.
This is in January of 2007.
And then July of 07 is when it shipped.
July of 07, yes, is when the iPhone shipped.
Now, I believe Eric had disclosed to Steve about the sooner project.
Because obviously it was public that Google had acquired Android.
And I believe that Steve Jobs knew that Google was working on, like, a Blackberry-style phone.
But he did not know about the dream prototype.
So Eric comes on stage, and you go watch this.
We'll link to this in this clip in the show notes.
It's crazy.
It's about a three-minute-long total thing.
Eric comes on stage.
He makes a joke about merging the companies that, like, Apple and Google are so.
close they should merge. He says the company should be called Apple Goo. And then he jokes and he
says, well, but here's the way with the iPhone that we can merge the companies without actually
merging. He's making these jokes and the camera is focused on Steve Jobs and he just has the
ick. I mean, that's the best way to describe. He's like trying to be a good sport and smile and
be like, yeah, but he has the ick. It is unbelievable to watch this, knowing every
everything that would happen over the next 10, 15 years.
This incredibly close collaboration.
There are two apps that launch in the very first version of the iPhone.
Remember, it didn't have an app store.
It was not open to third-party developers.
There is a YouTube app and a Maps app, both of which are Google services.
Now, the apps are written by Apple.
The icons are designed by Apple.
They're basically just consuming Google's data as APIs.
The only icons and apps on the phone are the ones that Apple
puts there, and two of the, yeah, I don't know how many of there were, 10, 12, 13 apps
are Google apps. It's wild. By the way, the YouTube icon with the Woodgreen TV, so awesome.
So awesome. I heard the YouTube team absolutely detested it. They hated it. Yeah, they hated it.
Well, because it wasn't the YouTube logo. And they knew. I mean, it was obvious this was not going
to work because the YouTube team was like, Apple didn't put our logo on there. Of course, they're going to start
bringing in other video content over time.
It was a little bit pre-alorithm, but the thinking was there of we have to make YouTube
a destination and then control the experience when they're in.
And making the app icon reminiscent of an old school CRT TV was also just like deeply
antithetical to YouTube inventing the video of tomorrow.
Yes, yes.
It still looked great, though.
It fit in with that first iPhone for sure.
It totally did.
do you know who was the leader of the Google mobile teams that developed the backends for these apps?
Oh, no.
Vic Gondotra.
Really?
Yes, that was his first job, I think, within Google, first or second job within Google.
Vic is going to come back up here in a minute.
So, the iPhone keynote, truly world-changing historic event.
The Android team, of course, is watching this.
And, yeah, that whole sooner prototype thing, the next day, right in the trash can, directly in the trash can.
The dream is no longer a dream.
It's happening now.
Get in, kid.
You're the A-team now.
Yep.
Clearly, touchscreens are the future of mobile devices.
And a capacitive touchscreen at that.
Yeah.
So, remember, Eric's made us on the Apple board.
once Steve Jobs finds out
about what the Android team
and Google is now doing,
he goes ballistic.
Or perhaps to use his word
thermonuclear.
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Full-on, classic Steve Jobs.
Supposedly, at an Apple all-hands,
meaning this is actually a little later,
but he's overheard
and leaked to the press as saying,
we did not enter the search business.
They entered the phone business.
Make no mistake, Google wants to kill the iPhone
we won't let them.
Wow.
Which is, I mean, to this day, fair,
Apple has been happy to just take a spiff
of all the traffic that they send to Google
and not compete in Google's core business.
Yep.
Now, I will say, I believe Apple reputation launders a little bit.
They get a lot of the value
of being in the search business
without having to do all the stuff
that they demonize from a privacy
and data sharing and all that ickyness perspective.
But fine, whatever.
It's doing business.
That's fair.
Apple did not enter the search business.
So in Walter Isaacson's book, Steve Jobs says,
I'm going to destroy Android because it's a stolen product.
I'm willing to go thermonuclear war on this.
Yes.
He also says,
I will spend my last dying breath if I need to,
and I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank to write this wrong.
He was pissed.
He was really pissed.
Now, interestingly, he doesn't actually kick Eric Schmidt off the board until 2009.
Yeah, it's interesting.
So I think it took Steve a little while to realize what the dream was within Google.
And there's also a reasonable argument back.
Look, both companies took stuff from each other.
A lot of the stuff that, you know, Apple touts that they were the first company to ever do multi-touch and they own the...
There were predecessor companies that did multi-touch before them, too.
the iPhone debuted a lot of technologies for the first time
and a lot of them were also just at the right time in history
and I think Android arrived at a lot of similar conclusions at the same time.
True. It's interesting, you said multi-touch. So multi-touch actually becomes the battleground.
Because that's the patent that they go to war over?
That's the patents that Apple has. So Steve Jobs threatens to sue Google
over implementation of multi-touch gestures. And so as a result, Android for several
years doesn't have things like pinch to zoom or the sort of swipe operating system UI
navigation gestures. And I'm pretty sure if you remember early Android phones for the first
couple years, every single one of them had four physical buttons at the bottom of the phone
to navigate the operating system. I think this is why. But let's take the Google side of this
argument for a minute. When Android does launch, they have the market, which today is the Play Store.
Apple didn't have an app store.
Yep.
Android had, when you swipe down a notification center with all the notifications from each of your individual apps, you could...
It took Apple years to get that.
Drag to rearrange apps on the home screen.
I mean, these are things that Apple then directly copied as well.
So...
Right.
Yeah.
All right.
So, yeah, let's get into the...
Great artist steel.
Exactly.
Let's get into the launch in the competition.
So November 2007, so what's that, 10 months after the...
iPhone reveal and five months after the launch. Remember, Android launches in 2008. Google announces
the formation of the open handset alliance. That's right. And this is a partnership with HTC,
Motorola, Samsung, LG, T-Mobile, Sprint, Qualcomm, Intel, Broadcom, and Texas Instruments.
And this was so confusing at the time. I and everybody else was like, what does it mean?
What is this? Is Google making a phone? Is Google not making a phone?
So then a whole year goes by with basically nothing.
And then in September of 2008, a lot of things happened in September of 2008, Chrome, Android, Lehman Brothers.
Google announces the T-Mobile G-1 phone, the G-phone.
And the T-Mobile G-1 is manufactured by HTC, remember Andy and Android's original partner in the prototype.
And the product name, the HTC product name for it is the HTC.
dream.
Ew.
This is the dream.
This was what they were working on, and in the U.S., it's called the G1.
It actually is a super interesting little device.
I wrote an app in it.
I had a class in college.
It was like a capstone class or something where I could pick my own project to do.
And we had a four-person team, and one of the guys had a T-Mobile G1, and we wrote, I think it was like a Java thing for it.
But he then founded the company Daily Booth.
after that oh wow yeah in fact it may have even been like a daily booth for android app you had a lot
of founders come out of your crew at ohio state awesome so it has a touchscreen on the front with the
physical navigation buttons like it was talking about it has a slide out horizontal query keyboard
sort of reminiscent of the sidekick back in the days unlike the iPhone it has multitasking
so you can run multiple apps at once
and it has third-party applications.
Now, that's a little bit unfair to the iPhone,
because by the time the G-1 actually launched,
Apple had indeed just shipped the App Store.
The event where they launch it is like T-Mobile event in New York City.
In a commercial kitchen,
it's a haphazard random launch.
You can't even find video of it today.
There's like little clips you can find in still images.
What is widely reported,
and you can actually see in photos,
Larry and Sergey do show up.
They rollerblade into the building.
They rollerblade on stage.
There are all these T-Mobile and HTC executives there in suits.
And here come Larry and Sergey on rollerblades on stage.
Listeners, join the acquired email list.
We'll throw this in the next email that goes out.
Yeah.
It was haphazard, to say the least.
But the G1 slash dream becomes a pretty decent success.
It sells over a million units.
in the U.S., and just this one device, this one phone, gets 6% smartphone market share,
which puts it roughly on par with POM, like all of POM, the G1 kind of matches in
market share, but the smartphone market is still very small.
Yeah, it's important to remember. Mobile really wasn't a thing until 2011 of very obviously
the next wave and the next computing paradigm.
Yeah.
But, to be fair to Apple and the iPhone, it is starting to run away with the market.
And this is to the point of, man, if Google had not bought Android when it had, it would have been too late.
So the whole lifetime of the G1, they sell about a million units.
The iPhone sold 11 million units in 2008 alone, 20 million in 2009.
So basically overnight, Apple and the iPhone goes from not in the smartphone market at all to over 50% market share of smartphones.
But as great as the iPhone was, it did have a few weaknesses.
No copy paste.
No copy paste.
Yep.
No multitasking.
As mentioned before, it didn't multitask.
Not very customizable.
I think we're still in the era of you can't even change your wallpaper on the iPhone.
Pretty sure we are.
I think it's still just the black background.
Yep.
You can't put your own apps on it from anywhere but the app store even after it launches.
Yep.
A big knock at the time, people love that it's a touchscreen, people really wanted the physical keyboards.
Yep.
And the biggest problem with the iPhone, at least in the U.S., you can only get it on AT&T.
And you could only get it with the edge network.
It was unusable.
That's right.
It didn't have 3D.
It was so terrible.
I mean, eventually, the iPhone 3G came out within a year, but even that was really slow.
It was, the network had not caught up to what you wish the device could do for a few years.
Yep. So that brings us to Holiday 2009 and the Motorola droid.
Changed everything.
It's sort of funny to say now, like, oh, the Motorola, like the Motorola, this changed everything.
Yes, the motor. I mean, when we interviewed Steve Bomber a couple months ago, he brought it up.
When the droid launched, it was Holiday 2009. And I think you and I were like, was it really that late, wasn't it early?
And he was like, nope. Christmas 2009, I will never forget it. That is when Android won the market.
This was the moment.
And Google was really willing to put their brand second.
Now, were they really putting their brand second?
It's Android versus droid, so very convenient.
But, like, if you were to go survey the American public in 2009, 10, 11, 12, maybe even 13,
and say, do you know about Android, the mobile operating system?
No.
Do you know about droid?
Oh, yeah, I have a droid phone.
Well, and then there were a couple of years after that where I was like, do you know,
know about Google and Android? Yeah, maybe. Do you know about Samsung and Galaxy? Oh, yeah. I know about
that. Yeah, exactly. So we'll get into that in a sec. The droid. Droid does, baby. Verizon at this point,
is getting pummeled by AT&T. It's been two years since the iPhone launch. AT&T isn't just stealing a lot
of subscribers from Verizon because of the iPhone. They're stealing the best subscribers. The people that are
willing to pay the most money for the biggest price data plans for smartphones. Verizon finally
decides, like, we got to change the game here. We got to be able to compete with the iPhone.
We're going to go all in on Android. We are going to buy a device and make this our flagship
smartphone positioned against the iPhone, and we're going to invest hugely behind this thing.
So the device itself, the actual droid, made by Motorola, it was a great device.
It had a big screen, big screen for the time, a slide-out keyboard.
It had a 5-mapixel camera, removable battery, all of these things the iPhone didn't have.
Probably the most important feature it had, though.
The killer, killer app was on the software side.
it was the first Android device launched with Google Maps turn-by-turn navigation.
I didn't realize that.
So before the droid, there was this whole consumer electronics product category of dedicated GPS devices.
People old enough to remember.
Tom-Toms.
Tom-Toms.
Navtecs.
People would buy these devices, Garmin.
Yep.
They would put them in their cars.
and you also paid a monthly subscription fee for the service of the term-by-turn navigation.
Overnight, this entire product category gets obsolete, Sherlocked, gone.
Because Google Maps is a better product with better navigation, and it's free.
No more monthly fees.
Just baked in in your phone and the device you already have with you,
why on earth would anybody buy, let alone pay monthly for a standalone GPS product again?
Yep.
And you know what?
It doesn't have it?
The iPhone.
The Apple version of Google Maps, you had to manually advance the steps.
So it would pull up the route and then you could tap the button to be like, I have made this turn, now show me the next.
That's right.
Part of it.
That's such a funny.
You're exactly right.
I remember that too.
Not really what you want to do while you're.
driving. Man. Yeah. It's crazy how not that long ago this was. Totally. That was the killer feature.
But even more important than the features was the marketing and the muscle that Verizon put behind this.
So they licensed the droid name from Lucasfilm. That's right. And I think Lucasfilm was mentioned at the
bottom in the credits of every commercial. Yes, every commercial. And they did these series of
commercials that we've been referencing. Man, if you lived in the U.S. and you are older,
than like 12 at this time.
This is burned in your memory.
It was so great.
The first 80% of the ad, 90% of the ad,
was an Apple-style ad knockoff
with the like bright, happy, upbeat music
and the white background.
And it had the fading Apple-style text.
And it said, I don't multitask.
I don't have a removable battery, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
And then the very last, you know, five seconds of the ad,
there was like a hard cut and like static noise and it was black and it was edgy and then
it said droid does it was so good so the CMO of Verizon so Verizon did all of this said that
the campaign was designed to quote wake up the market and boy did it ever so that
original droid I think it sold a quarter million units the first weekend it was on sale
and then it sold a million units faster than the original iPhone had.
Like, there was just so much pent-up demand for a real smartphone on the Verizon network.
Plus all the, you know, yeah, this has turn-by-turn navigation.
But even, like, put aside whether it was better or not, it just was a real smartphone on Verizon.
Time magazine named the droid its product of the year for 2009.
Wow.
The bigger thing, though, is that, like, Verizon going all in.
behind it, even though they would add the iPhone later, it creates sort of this seed of what the
Android user base would become today, at least in America, because Verizon went all in on Android,
all in on Android. Over the next couple years, they followed the original Droid up with, let's see,
there was the HTC Droid Incredible, the Droid X, the Droid 2, the Droid Bionic, the Droid Max. All of these
had major marketing campaigns behind it. Game over for the
the segment of the market that is not Apple, this different OEM from operating system, Google just
runs away with it. And before this, Microsoft had a shot. They really did. They were a systemic
disadvantage because they were going to carriers and saying, why don't you pay us five bucks,
10 bucks? And Google was going to them and saying, here you go, this is free. You can have the
source code and you can modify it as you see fit. Even today, I think Samsung has their own
OS, Samsung 1 or something like that, that looks different. I mean, it's Android, but it's
the open source version of Android that they've customized. That's the thing that's on, I don't
know, a billion phones. And three, we aren't Microsoft. Yeah, you guys don't want to be compact.
Right. Microsoft managed to suck up all the profit in that entire value chain. And
handset makers, you currently make money. So why would you go work with Microsoft who did that to
the PC makers? And then as a little sweetener on top of all this, you know how I mentioned
it was free in open source.
It's actually less than free.
We're actually going to pay you.
Yeah.
For searches that originate on your phone,
we will give a little rev share
to both the carrier and the OEM, the handset maker.
Yep.
So this was not widely publicized at the time,
as you can imagine.
But Bill Gurley wrote a blog post
where he had heard from France
that Google was paid.
paying carriers and OEMs to use Android, even though Android was free.
And he wrote this incredible blog post about it called The Less Than Free Business Model.
And he basically predicted that Android's going to run away with this here.
If you're a carrier or an OEM, sure, there's a segment of the market that's going to demand Apple.
That's fine.
But Microsoft is dead.
Palm is dead.
Blackberry is dead.
There's no way you can compete with free, let alone less than free, where they are paying you to
take something of value for free.
Yep.
And from Google side, it's the exact same thing
as that thing we talked about with open source in Chromium.
They're happy to give a few percentage points
in traffic acquisition costs of their search revenue
to people who are ensuring
that the platform underneath them
doesn't belong to someone else.
I mean, there was some risk that it was all Apple.
And then that creates two problems for Google.
One, they pay Apple a lot more money
then they pay the combination of the carrier and the OEM maker.
Those get a much smaller spiff.
Two, this means that Google controls more of the underlying environment that they operate in.
Imagine how terrible it would be for them if mobile safari was the new Internet Explorer
and their entire franchise was at risk of Apple saying,
and we're going to point traffic over here now.
Google is happy to toss a couple of points over to these guys.
I can't think of another example of a dominant technology business and business model
that has successfully survived and transitioned a major platform shift
and thrived in that next platform as well.
Mobile was a platform shift, a huge one.
I mean, going from PC to the web was a platform shift.
going from PCM web to mobile
was an even bigger platform shift.
Oh, oh, play it out even back further in history than this.
IBM was dominant in mainframes
and then lost their dominance in the PC era.
Microsoft was dominant in PCs
and then lost their dominance in the web era.
Google was dominant on the web
and stayed dominant in the mobile era.
I mean, they didn't derive giant profits
from the mobile, like directly
off of selling phones or selling the OS
or, you know, they make somebody on the play store
but not giant amounts relative to the rest of their money
and what other players like Apple make.
But they kept search going.
But they managed to stay relevant to consumers
with these hundreds of millions, billions of devices
that they shipped, and their business was doing better than ever.
I mean, all of these Android phones that are shipping,
especially in the earlier years,
what is the most prominent part of the UI on the touchscreen?
Giant freaking Google search bar right there at the top.
Right.
The state of play of being a big tech company, and this dates back 80 years, is technology moves fast, and the new paradigms disrupt everyone that came before you. So you get one era. And you've got to make the absolute most of the one era that you grew up in. And after that, you're probably going to lose relevance. You might keep your money machine going for a long time. Famously, IBM made more revenue than Microsoft for a lot longer than people think. Or even take Microsoft in Windows. Like, Windows is still big today.
Yep, but the importance of that platform is going to fade and fade and fade.
But, yeah, you won't be able to transition your business model into the next era.
Google did it.
And occasionally someone, you know, misses the second era but comes back for the third.
Like Apple figured out mobile.
They never won a previous era.
They were a player in PCs, but they didn't win.
Almost no one gets two, and almost no one gets two successive ones.
And that is the really impressive thing that Google figured out how to do here.
Yeah.
I mean, guys, like we said, this episode is the hit parade.
Android basically from end of 2009 onward just washes over the world like a title wave.
In Holiday 2009, when the droid comes out, total Android market share of the smartphone market is still in the, you know, the G1 range, like 5, 6% global market share.
One year later, 30%.
Wow.
They go from 5% to 30%.
30% in one year, they announced that over 200,000 Android devices are shipping every day
around the world.
The next year, in 2011, Android's market share is 50%.
And two years after that, by the end of 2013, it is 80% market share.
In many ways, it's sort of the Visa Network of Networks thing, where they don't have to
make every phone, they don't have just one horse in the race.
they're getting leverage by having two, three, four, five major manufacturers of these devices
that are all independently doing their own marketing.
And there's a very clever arrangement where you can just have the Android open source project
and you can build your own mobile phone and, you know, you can launch it and you don't
have our app store and you don't have to default to Google Search and you don't get Google
Matt, like you just have the operating system and it's great, anyone can do that.
but why wouldn't you want to have our app store?
It's where all the apps are.
And if you do that, then you get all the great Google services, all the apps.
You get the native Gmail and the native maps and all this great stuff we've written.
And if you do that, then Google's the default search.
We'll pay you for that.
And then you make money.
Yeah.
But by the way, if you want all this stuff that your consumers are going to demand,
you are going to default to Google search.
Like it's a very...
That's the payment.
That's the...
That's the offer you can't refuse.
Yes.
Now, here's the actual sort of crazy thing.
As I said, by 2013, Android global market share is 80%.
That's actually higher than it is today.
Today, it's down to, like, I think, 72%.
And Apple is 27.999%.
Apple's share has really grown.
No question Android pushed iPhone to be better on many dimensions.
things like cheaper iPhones, bigger screens, better cameras,
I mean, on and on and on and on of things that I don't think Apple would have done
if Android hadn't been pushing them.
Probably not big cheap screens, but some of the cameras, I think so.
Maybe. I don't know.
I mean, for years, the iPhones did not have good cameras.
A big part of that droid marketing push was the five megapixel camera.
That's right.
The original few iPhones had a two megapixel camera, I think.
think? Like, it was crappy.
Yeah. They've definitely pushed each other.
Yeah. So then the other quick thing to mention on Android history, there was one interesting
moment and tension with Samsung in the early to mid-2010s. Samsung basically said, oh, okay,
the iPhone is the premium device. Android is this incredibly flexible platform. What if we just
take Android and copy the iPhone with Android? And they got really good at it.
the galaxy devices were just shipping in huge, huge numbers.
And then Samsung started stripping out Google services
and putting their own Samsung services in on some of their devices.
That was a bridge too far for Google.
So this is when Google started the Pixel program.
Google had done the Nexus program making their own hardware before.
The Pixel, though, was and is a sort of reference device
that, yeah, consumers could buy,
but more so to show the rest of the OEM market,
the non-Samsom market,
hey, here are reference designs essentially for great premium devices,
great cameras, all the features you want.
Here, copy these.
It's the same thing as the Microsoft Surface strategy,
why Bomber was so adamant.
We got to make a surface.
We got to show the OEMs how to do this.
Right.
It's funny.
So I've been trying to think about
what is the business of Android?
Google having Android versus Google not having Android
and I tried to pull up the most credible numbers I possibly could
there's basically two things that you just have to add together
to create the value one is how much money they make from the Play Store
which has become significant didn't used to be but is now
and then the second is how much money are they saving
by not having the searches originate from a platform that they don't own
I used to think, oh, because it's Android, they don't have to pay money.
They have to pay $20 billion to Apple.
It's not zero.
They do actually have to pay, like we talked about.
David and I sort of figured out as we were going through the financial disclosures and stuff,
they do pay the OEMs and they do pay the carriers.
And the question is how much?
Because once you can kind of figure out how much, then you can do a little bit of napkin math
to figure out, okay, well, how much are they still saving by it not being Apple?
So Google paid out last year, and I'm just using the current numbers to try to figure out what the splits have always been.
They paid out last year $55 billion in total traffic acquisition costs.
Now, traffic acquisition costs are actually the sum of two different numbers from two different businesses because they love to obfuscate things.
One, it's what we're actually looking for, the acquisition of traffic to Google Search.
And the other component is money that we paid to public.
where our ads show up in the sort of double-click AdSense world.
Now, we know that that averages about a 70-30 split,
and we know that they made $30 billion last year gross in the Google network.
So you could say, okay, they probably paid out about $21 billion of that $55 billion
in the AdSense double-click Google network world.
So that backs our $55 billion down to $34 billion.
Okay, that's $34 billion in actual traffic acquisition for Google search.
And we know $20 was iPhone.
Right, for Safari searches.
So that means there's $14 billion that gets distributed to non-Apple traffic acquisition distribution partners,
which in their annual report, they define as browser providers, mobile carriers,
original equipment manufacturers, and software developers.
It's basically $14 billion to the Android mobile carriers and OEMs plus Firefox.
Yep.
What am I missing?
I'm going to guess Firefox is less than a billion, call it somewhere around half a billion-ish.
Yeah.
There's probably some version of the old portal deals that still exist.
Properties on the web that have Google search baked into it.
Okay, so let's cut $4 billion off for Firefox.
and the other web properties and other.
Yep. Okay, so $10 billion going to the carriers and OEMs.
It's actually pretty significant that $10 billion going to carriers and OEMs.
It's half of what they're paying Apple.
Half of what they're paying Apple, but for many, many, many more devices.
Right. And so clearly the rev share to the carriers and OEMs is a much smaller percent
than what they have to pay Apple. I'd guess a quarter. Either way, I actually,
think after walking all the way through it, the bigger component of this is just
de-risking their future. It's not how many billions. They don't care about giving $10 billion
up for this. Yeah. As we've been saying all episode, Google is more than happy to pay
traffic acquisition costs to any and everyone. Yes. And so then direct value that they make
from the Play Store, it actually came out in a lawsuit. In 2019, Play Store revenue was $11.2 billion.
then gross profit was $8.5 billion and $7 billion in operating income.
Now, $7 billion, not nothing, but still a far cry from Google's core business of ads
from search, Gmail, and maps.
And that same year, the core business did almost $100 billion in revenue.
So something like $85 billion in gross profit is my best estimate and around $30-ish billion
in operating income.
So even though the Play Store made $7 billion in 2019, the important thing is that Android
is still primarily protecting the core search ads business
and making sure that traffic doesn't go elsewhere.
This levered Google's web business into the mobile era.
How amazing is that?
Yeah, that's true.
It probably generated several hundred billion dollars, profit dollars,
that they may not have had those years otherwise.
Yep.
So I guess what I'm saying is,
obviously Android was a giant success,
And the biggest reason, even though they save, I don't know, 10, 15 billion a year from not having to pay it to Apple.
And even though they generate $8 billion, I'm sure at this point it's bigger.
I don't know, $10, $15 billion a year.
Really, it's about just protecting the core, not about saving costs.
Yeah.
And this one, they almost missed it.
They hadn't bought Android when they had.
Like, that window was closing fast.
And Microsoft did miss it.
Fast, fast, fast.
Yep.
And so at some point.
Andy Rubin leaves, and Sundar actually takes over the combined teams. So our hero here,
who is starting to gather more responsibilities. It was just the application clients, and then
it was Chrome. And in 2013, it becomes Chrome and Android. And whenever you see Sundar on stage,
he is very proud of Google's two open platforms. Yep. So today, there are more than three billion
active Android devices. I think it's even higher than that now. It was just silly. It was like
seven billion people in the world. They're active.
Over three billion active Android phones.
Yes. So you're probably thinking coming into this 2010, 2011 era, they're really feeling
themselves over there at Google. You know, we've jumped over some failures, but it's been
hit after hit after hit in a lot of these areas that really matter. Just like we talked about
on the Microsoft episodes, it really doesn't matter when you fail and how many times you fail,
even the size of your failures, if your hits are these giant, world-changing platform-type tech businesses that endure for decades.
And that's what they had on their hands.
Yep.
And it sure looked at this time, like there was another big technology category out there.
Of social.
That Google should be playing in of a similar size called Social.
Yes.
And this is the Google Plus story.
I'd say rest in peace, but I don't think anybody misses it.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, I want to start this story the way that people expect us to start this story.
And I have a little bit of a different take on it as we get partway in.
Great.
So Google had been interested in social for a long time.
They weren't blind, blind to it.
In 2007, they tried to do open social, and they basically failed at that because Facebook didn't participate in Facebook was social.
So everything else combined didn't really matter.
Oh, you didn't start where I thought you were going to start.
The craziest thing is that Google had Facebook before Facebook.
Orkid.
Yeah, that's true, which I think was like a 20% time project that then blew up in Brazil.
Yeah, totally.
No, no, yeah.
Okay.
So there was a Turkish engineer who worked for Google named Orkitt Bukokhton, and his passion was social networking.
And Friendster was a thing at the time.
And so January 2004, before Gmail, before the Google IPO,
before Facebook launches on the Harvard campus in his 20% time,
he launches a social network within Google called Orkut.
And it didn't become that big in America,
but it got at its peak, I think, 300 million users.
It was the biggest social network in Brazil,
the biggest social network in India.
Wow.
And Google was like, I don't know, it doesn't seem that important.
All right.
So open social then in 2007, Google Wave in 2009.
By the way, can we just pause and say 2009?
This is like right after Chrome, right after Android.
Google is a big place.
And Google is a siloed place at this point.
I mean, it's kind of crazy that Android is happening over in this other building
and there's this like fight with Apple.
And that's the same time that they're doing Google Wave.
Like it's weird that this is all sort of concurrent.
The company was focused in a lot of different directions.
But it was so decent.
And it actually worked.
Well, it worked early.
Yeah.
It worked really well to get all the stuff off the ground.
It was so interesting doing the research for this episode because so many of the people we talked to, even people who were leaders of a lot of these products, because Google was so decentralized and so siloed, they were focused on their thing on Android or Chrome or whatever.
And so we'd ask, you know, what was the overall strategy?
What was the through line to all of this?
And we kept getting answers of like, well, it was just Googling.
worked on what they thought was cool, and it was good for the web. And, like, that is absolutely true.
But there was this all overlay of this very, very thin layer of strategy that held the whole
web together. I think that the strategy was pretty tight at the top level, and they just didn't actually
need to communicate it down very far. Most people that I talked to said, I don't know,
I was just trying to build great products that people love. I think it was a feature, not a bug, is what I'm
saying, that it didn't communicate down, because it let the teams below build really.
really, really great products.
Yep.
And never really think about
how is this going
to help the ads business.
And that was okay.
Yep.
So Wave failed
because really nobody
knew what to use it for
despite a dazzling
and wonderful
first introductory video.
Buzz then in 2010,
that created this big
privacy debacle right at launch.
It was super short-lived.
That shut down.
So then in 2010,
Erz Holza,
very senior Google,
at this point,
probably distinguished engineer
senior vice president,
Yeah, the guy who created the distributed infrastructure.
Right after the buzz failure, he is inspired to write this memo,
kind of like the Bill Gates' 1995 internet memo.
There's a sea change going on.
The internet is becoming more people-oriented.
Social media could be a problem for us.
The social media challenge requires a decisive and substantial response
involving a significant deployment of personnel right away.
Essentially, the internet was now starting to organize around,
people in this Web 2.0 era, not just pages and applications, the things that were sort of the
domain of Google. And so here's why I want to pause, David, and I'm going to take it in a little
bit different direction than I think you're probably expecting, which is, so therefore they
went after Facebook. I think it's a little bit more related to the palace intrigue at Google
and a little bit less on the nail strategic. So if you zoom out and look at the company right now,
it's pretty fragmented. It's got different fiefdoms with big personalities at the top of each of
these fiefdoms. Android, Chrome, search, YouTube, developer relations trying to sort of will a
Google platform into existence. Different products with kind of competing goals. Ultimately,
they all help Google's overarching mission, but there's a lot of elbows starting to come out.
Android was its own fiefdom totally off on its own island.
fighting an existential battle. Chrome is starting to do the same stuff as Android. They're
building their own operating system. It's not clear what belongs in an Android camp versus a
Chrome camp, and Sundar hasn't unified them yet. Search, very protected, separate team,
especially the core people doing search ranking and monetization. No one touches them.
YouTube is totally separate. Gmail is massive, and it really is the only one in 2009-10
at the company that owns identity, since it's the only Google property that you actually have to
log into. YouTube has its own entirely different username and password system. It's a mess,
right? It's a complete mess. So Larry is sensing this. He's not CEO at the time, but he's realizing
the company's all over the place. He decides he's just going to come back and get the company
on track. And so I think Google Plus is kind of just the thing he picked as the single thing to
galvanize and unify the company around. And no matter what they picked and how they executed
it, it was going to create a lot of carnage. Hmm. I can buy that. There was a big shift that
needed to happen in one way, shape, or form, and Google Plus ended up kind of being the ugly thing
they did. Yeah. A re-centralizing of authority, so to speak, within the company. Right. So in May 2010,
they get the top 50 people at Google's leadership assembled to discuss what to do. The argument for this is
this is more of a convenient crisis.
Yeah.
Model.
And it might be a real crisis also,
but it's also exactly what you're saying, David.
So officially then in January 2011,
Google announces Larry Page
will return as CEO in a few months
that April.
Right away, Larry moves his office
into what would become the Google Plus building.
Wow.
Yep.
So they had just come out of this chapter.
They've got this amazing business.
The whole Chrome and Bing thing
was defense against Microsoft.
Android was defense.
against Apple and Microsoft.
And Google Plus is now defense against Facebook.
Yep.
And legitimately, you could imagine a world
where social ends up becoming way more important
and the only places to put ads
and the places where people are asking for information
and there was rumors for a long time,
Facebook was going to build a search engine.
You have the attention.
You can hijack it and do other stuff with it.
These were Wild Gardens.
Facebook was a walled garden.
Google search couldn't index what happened
inside of Facebook. Right.
And so, yeah, you could see how this is an existential threat.
The traffic is growing. Like, oh, my gosh, what if this becomes AOL all over again?
Right. And that's the main thing. One tier down from that is Facebook doesn't even allow other ad servers.
At least with AOL, we could do a deal with them and power their monetization.
Facebook just hired Cheryl Sandberg. They're doing this themselves.
They're doing it all in-house, closed-loop system. Yep.
So Google Plus, what was Google Plus and how did it get built? So it was a one-year sprint,
following this point, the 50 getting together,
and it was built in a very, very ungoogly way.
It was not organic, David, like these passion projects you're talking about.
It was instilled from on high down upon all of the products.
It was not based on a core technical insight.
It was not consensus-driven.
It was top-down command-and-control style led by the person that you mentioned earlier,
Vic Gundotra.
Now, who was Vic Gundotra?
Yeah. Vic was this interesting character.
Like we said earlier, he had been leading Google's developer efforts in the pre-Android days.
And he was sort of the frontman. He was the MC at Google I.O.
Right. If you were looking for somebody to communicate and push down this new top-down vision across the company, he would be a logical choice.
Yes. I don't know if he raised his hand. I don't know if Larry said, hey, I really think you should do this on our behalf.
But what is definitely true is it became Vick's thing.
And Eric and Larry and Sergei step back and let Vick run with it.
And he was given an enormous amount of institutional authority.
And we should say, too, you alluded to this earlier, what was Google Plus?
It wasn't just a social product in and of itself.
It was baked into all Google.
It was inserted into every other product that Google has.
had. There's a quote from Vic to the press at the time about this, about what Google Plus is. He says,
this is the next generation of Google. It is Google plus one. Oh, boy. Oh, boy. There's a lot of
these really corny. I'm no crazy even saying that. Oh, it gives me the hebe jibis. So yeah,
it was a Facebook style thing, but its goal, in addition to being a Facebook style thing,
was to leverage all of Google's assets and make all Google things, Google Plus things. So they moved
big headcounts out of each team
and onto the Google Plus team. They reach
deep to integrate with these other products
and it's very clear who the boss was in all these
negotiations. You had a clear mandate.
Your job this half year, this
year, is do these Google Plus integrations.
Yeah, your OKR,
famously ran on OKRs, was now all
about pluses.
And Danny Crichton, who would go on to become the
managing editor at TechCrunch, at this point
in time, was a Google intern. And he wrote about
it later. And he said, due to this integration,
much of it was forced. The culture
around the company at Google had become deeply poisonous by the time I started. I still remember talking
to one member of the Picasso team, who was at Google's photo repository that they bought,
who told me to F off when I asked about integrating Google Plus into the product. He was
hardly the only one. Company-wide bonuses were based on the success of Google Plus. They even
went so far as to put little plus one buttons on mobile advertisements, like those little
banner ads at the bottom. Yes, this is the best. Google had bought AdMob. Yes.
And the mobile display ad units...
You could plus one it.
Who the hell wants to plus one an ad?
I mean, this is like Facebook's like button, but Google Plus's version.
And they're like, any Google thing should be plus onable.
So they even reached into YouTube comments, and YouTube comments became Google Plus posts.
Oof.
I mean, they almost killed the golden goose.
Right.
They almost killed all of these golden gooses that they had.
Yes.
And so Google Plus, from a product perspective, it wasn't just Facebook.
They brought a lot of really interesting ideas.
Google Hangouts came out of this.
Google Photos came out of this.
There were these things called Sparks.
I mean, they really rethought a lot of social networking.
The issue is nobody really wanted to rethink social networking.
That was a Google priority to get people to use this, not a user-driven one.
And they tried to essentially put rocket fuel onto scale.
something that really didn't have product market fit.
Well, I really think that key huge mistake with Google Plus, one of the huge mistakes with Google Plus
was...
You don't need a Facebook when there's already Facebook?
Not even that.
Facebook was already dying.
Mark Zuckerberg had already realized that the future of social was not what it looked like
at this point in time.
As Google is launching Google Plus...
In 2011, June 2011.
2011, 2012, 2013, these were the big years for Google Plus.
What is Mark Zuckerberg doing?
He's buying Instagram.
He's buying WhatsApp.
And he's remaking, essentially, you know, Facebook into what meta would become of like, hey, what we used to think of his social networking has bifurcated into two things.
Public media, i.e., you know, YouTube, Instagram, UGC, and private messaging.
And here's Google.
launching, I kid you not, this is the craziest thing, desktop first, with a desktop-only
UI to arrange your friends into circles.
Circles, that's right, circles.
Which is on its own, it's such a computer science way of thinking about it.
Oh, my friends are in sometimes overlapping, sometimes not overlapping groups that I want to carefully
label so that I can identify deterministically who I want to share what with.
Right.
Nobody wants to do that.
Yeah.
Here's the thing that just leapt out to me about Google Plus.
This was Google's Windows Longhorn slash Windows Vista.
In our Microsoft saga, we talked about how Vista slash Longhorn was the most damaging thing to the company.
Because of the distraction and the siphoning of resources and the best talent away from working on what really mattered.
Now, the question I was asking myself and others in research of, okay, what were the negative
consequences of that. So like with Microsoft, it was clear. Google was the negative consequence. Like the
whole reason Microsoft let Google fester from their perspective for all these years and didn't
kneecap them was they were tied up with all the distraction from Vista. And losing relevance with
developers because they keep selling them a platform that kept not shipping. And then when it eventually
did ship, it wasn't good. Right. So then I was sort of trying to figure out like, okay, what are
the similar consequences for Google of the plus era. And at first I couldn't really think of it. I was
like, oh, well, Android's pretty good. YouTube's pretty good. Chrome's pretty good. Search is still
pretty good. Gemini, AI comes out later. It's all pretty good. But there are two things.
Messaging, probably. I bet in a non-plus world, WhatsApp, something like that could be owned by Google.
Yeah, two things. One is messaging. Totally miss messaging. So when I was a business school student at Stanford,
Eric was now executive chairman
and he started co-teaching a class
at GSP and I took his class.
I was one of his students during these years.
It was awesome.
It was one of the best classes I ever took.
And the quarter when I was taking the class
was when Facebook bought WhatsApp.
And I remember Eric coming into class
right after it happened and just being like,
God damn it.
We missed it.
We totally missed it.
That's because Google was distracted.
So that was one thing.
And then I realized the other as bigger or bigger thing
is cloud.
Google should have been massively investing in cloud.
And there were all sorts of reasons that they did.
We're going to save this for the next episode.
But I was like, yeah, especially think about where the impetus for this came from,
from this memo, the Ers quake memo, as it's known.
Ers should have been focused on cloud.
He should not have been focused on social.
And Google had the wrong strategy in cloud for many years.
and as a result, that's why their cloud business is way behind Amazon and Microsoft.
And maybe they churned some talent.
Maybe there were some good people that got burned by the culture, sort of souring.
You could argue this destroyed product velocity.
Yeah.
So, like, people complain today that Google's always working on really interesting technology
and they just never get cool products out the door.
That is by far the biggest complaint you hear about Google from...
Slow and big and bureaucratic.
Yep.
folks on the inside and outside these days is just like too slow. And yeah, yeah, that's probably
the biggest negative consequences. Maybe you could trace that here. I bet you can. Because think about it.
Before this, we just spent this whole episode talking about all these amazing things. They were building
and shipping and acquiring and transforming. Until Gemini, and arguably that's a, I actually don't know
where Gemini stacks. Is it a third place product? Still a question mark. Until Gemini, what great
breakthrough consumer service did they launch after Google Plus?
I got nothing.
Oof.
Yeah.
That's pretty wild.
After having this incredible 10-year run.
And there was a lot of stuff they tried.
I think some things for Android users.
Think about Google Now that predated Google Assistant.
Maybe Google Home.
These are not world-changing products.
Right.
It's funny.
The thing that I keep thinking about from the Google Plus failure is this big existential Facebook threat they were worried about.
I mean, there was a strategy memo in 2013 where Neil Mohan said,
there is a risk that Facebook becomes the starting point of the internet. Google knew social was the future and tried to win it, but interestingly, they didn't, and they've been fine. Right, right, right. It was all totally fine. And Facebook was really freaked out, too, that Google was going to come in and win it. I mean, Google was like this giant, and Facebook was recently public, going through their own problems. So even though it was kind of like a nothing burger and Google Plus was a footnote in history, both companies were completely.
all in on this is the big battle. And ultimately, Google wasn't a credible threat to Facebook and
Facebook went in a different direction anyway. Facebook went in a different direction. Yeah. So
it's almost like the end of burn after reading. Have you ever seen that movie? No. I won't spoil
anything. But the feeling you have at the end is you just watched all this crazy stuff happen and
you're like, whoa, wait, did any of that matter? That's how Google Plus feels to me. Yeah. Funny.
Google Plus did have two great surviving products, Hangouts, which became meat and photos.
Yep. Photos is a billion user product today. Wow. Huge. The biggest thing, and I think this is like kind of getting back to my original postulate of never waste a crisis. You know what we have today? Google accounts.
Yep. You know what Google is today? It's one company. It's not these little fiefdoms here and there of,
different people amassing power and building things in different ways.
I mean, I'm sure there's still plenty of that.
Everything about Google got more unified from this era.
They have a failed product and a smoking crater to show for it,
but a unified look across all their products, a unified login,
that would, I think, be pretty important for them going forward.
Anyway, my snarky finish on all this is it's tempting to say Google lost in social
because Google Plus was this giant smoking crater.
But actually, all of social ended up pivoting to either,
look like messaging or like YouTube anyway.
YouTube is kind of the winning paradigm in quote-unquote social media and UGC media.
Yep.
So they should have just done nothing and just watch the money printer go burr.
Yep.
To put a bow on it, Vic ends up leaving the company in 2014.
In 2019, they finally shut Google Plus down.
There's a blog post about it.
They cite like a big security breach as the reason I'm like, oh, no, we've discovered.
there's this huge security vulnerability, thus we need to shut down all of Google Plus.
Dude, it's so bad. There's been 50 Google products that all sound kind of the same.
They launched this one called Currents at one point. And when they shut Google Plus down,
this is horrible. Many people wrote like articles as posts on Google Plus, and they're just gone.
Yeah, that's right. Actually, it was sort of an impediment to doing some of the research for this episode because these posts are gone.
So if you go to plus.govgoogle.com slash anything, it just redirects you to Google Currants.
However, Google Currants has now been shut down.
So it is a Google Workspace blog post announcing the currents shutdown.
Every time you click any Google Plus link anywhere on the web, you go to a blog post that tells you about the shutdown of currents.
That's the most Googly thing.
They've got to do a better job with those.
Well, by 2015.
It's our last section, the bridge to alphabet.
Yeah.
It's clear it's time for a new era at Google.
The company announces that it is reinventing itself.
It's becoming an entirely different company.
Google is becoming alphabet in August of 2015.
And Larry Page will be the CEO of this new alphabet holding company.
Sundar Pichai will be the CEO of Google,
which will be by far the largest and really primary operating company within Alphabet.
Interestingly, they didn't at all decide to split up YouTube or any of the various products, etc.
Yeah, they just spent all these years unifying it all. That's all Google.
They broke out Google X.
Yes, Google X they broke out.
Waymo is still part of X at this point in time that would later spin out as now part of Alphabet on its own.
But the other bets, including an alphabet, really quite clever, the nomenclature here, were Nest that they had just acquired, Google Fiber, Calico, and Verily, their two health companies, Google X Lab, and then Google Ventures and Capital G, the two investing entities that they had.
So, you know, then really the question is like, okay, well, why did they do this?
Why did Larry become CEO of Alphabet? Why did Sunar become CEO of Google?
I think this kind of had to happen as like a healing after Google Plus.
Sooner was a leader who had real cred going back to the early days
and with Chrome and with Android, like the core great products,
two of these core great products, platforms that we've talked about the whole episode
that have really driven the Google flywheel all along.
Interestingly, he had never worked in search or ads.
Right. But these are the platforms that had shoehorned Google into the mobile era,
and protected it from its greatest existential threat.
And just also Sundar's personality, I think,
was a way to reunify the company
and bring everybody back together.
Definitely strikes me as a peacemaker among big egos.
Yes.
And that is where we are going to leave Alphabet slash Google
for the moment.
Ben, give us a sense of how big this company had gotten.
So at the end of 15, it's gotten huge.
It's 75 billion in revenue.
52 billion of that is first-party sites, Google websites, AdWords, Gmail, Maps.
15 billion, the smaller part, is over in double-click AdSense land, and actually that's pretty
low margin revenue.
So again, the lion's share in Google websites.
YouTube is profitable at this point, and their bottom-line operating income, Google did
about $23 billion in operating income, and their other bets at this point lost about
three and a half billion. Their other bets are extremely interesting and will be the focus of our
next episode. But the big takeaway here, the business was still in 2015 and essentially is still today
search ads. Yep. And what so strikes me listening to you say those numbers in 2015,
they're huge. But also, Google is so much bigger today on these same businesses with this same
business model. Right. There was another 5x scaling to go over the next 10 years. Yes. It's crazy.
Google back then was like 20% the size of Google now. And nothing has basically changed when it
comes to the business model and products. I mean, nothing's changed since 2002. Right. Well, I think
this era, what we talked about all the episodes, all the hits were stewarding that business
through these C changes. But nothing has changed about what the core business is. It just
turned out that that seed of an eye that search ads actually scaled to the biggest market in
the world yeah all right just like the last episode with gmail at the end i've got one little
kota one little teaser for next time great ben what if i told you that between 2015 and
2016 so this next year this next 12 months after the alphabet transition all of the following people
were Google employees.
Alex Krashevsky of AlexNet,
dawn of machine learning AI,
his PhD advisor, Jeff Hinton,
godfather of AI,
his collaborator on the AlexNet paper,
Ilya Sotskiver,
founding scientist of OpenAI,
Dario Amaday,
co-founder with his sister
of Anthropic
Andre Carpathy
until recently
chief AI scientist
of Tesla
Chris Ola
Noam Shazir
Ian Goodfellow
and of course
the co-founders
of DeepMind
which Google acquired
in 2014
Demis Hasabas
Shane Legg
and Mustafa Suleiman
Mustafa runs AI
at Microsoft today
Andrew Ng
from Stanford
Kwok Lee, Oriel Vinalis, and oh yeah, in addition to all of those people, the authors of the Transformer paper, because Google invented the transformer and published the paper in June of 2017.
Right, which is the novel mechanism that all LLMs today from every big foundational model research lab is based on.
When I was talking to folks in the research for this episode, and AI came up, one of them said, you know, I have to remind people when I'm talking to partners out in the ecosystem that the T in chat, GPT, stands for Transformer and that we invented that.
Because it is also during this time, while Ilya is working at Google, that he poses the question to his research colleagues and the Google brain team that is working on all of this.
Gosh, what do you guys think if we just built one really, really, really big neural network?
And we set it loose with training data on the entire Internet, which, by the way, of course, we can do here at Google because, you know, thanks to the combination of the search index, we index the entire Internet, and all the products that we just talked about on this whole episode, we have all this data and all of this content out there.
If we did that, do you think it would learn everything?
Well, David, that feels like quite the groundwork for the next episode.
That feels like a story for next time.
Yeah.
But through that lens, there is another way to view everything that happens at Google during this 10-year period we just discussed,
which is that they're just collecting all the access, all the information, and all the talent for AI.
It's nuts.
There's this whole other world of research who would be the people that would drive the next decade or five decades of change.
and they basically had them all in one place at one time.
They were all employees of Google.
So I want to end with one more quote, this time from Larry Page, all the way back in the year 2000.
This is Larry talking in the year 2000.
Artificial intelligence would be the ultimate version of Google.
So if we had the ultimate search engine, it would understand everything on the web.
it would understand exactly what you wanted
and it would give you the right thing.
That's obviously artificial intelligence
to be able to answer any question.
Basically, because almost everything is on the web, right?
We're nowhere near doing that now.
However, we can get incrementally closer to that.
And that is basically what we work on.
And that's tremendously interesting
from an intellectual standpoint.
We have all this data.
If you printed out our index,
it would be 70 miles high now.
We have all this computation.
We have about 6,000.
thousand computers. This is 25 years ago. We have enough disk space to store like a hundred
copies of the whole web. So you have a really interesting confluence of a lot of different things,
a lot of computation, a lot of data that didn't used to be available. And from an engineering and
scientific standpoint, building things that make use of this is a really interesting intellectual
exercise. So I expect we'll be working on that for a while. Incredible. This is 25.
years ago that he said this. Amazing. All right. Should we do some analysis? Let's do some analysis.
All right. Let's do power. And for those who are new listeners, power is the section where we
analyze which of the seven powers does Google have from Hamilton-Helmer's framework that enables a business
to achieve persistent differential returns or be more profitable than their nearest competitor and do so
sustainably. Google is very, very weird to analyze for this because most of the way you think about Google,
is actually not where the economic transaction is. If you want to analyze the business, it is
why are advertisers spending a marginal dollar with Google versus spending it elsewhere?
And Google has the seven powers that show up in numerous instances all over their business.
But I think the interesting way for us to do this analysis, David, is let's look at each one,
just assume Google has them all, and say where is the biggest or a very large example in our mind of
where each of them show up. Great. I like that.
So counter positioning typically doesn't show up for incumbents, for large companies.
This is the exception, though, with Google.
Right, where you just look at their sort of new businesses.
For example, in this episode, talking about Android, they massively counterpositioned against Microsoft.
Right.
The less than free business.
Less than free business model.
I mean, this is the clearest example of counter positioning, I think, that has ever existed.
Oh, hey, my competitors require you to pay them.
How about I pay you instead?
Right.
And my competitors can't do that because they don't have the business model of advertising
based on search such that they can justify doing this.
Right.
Scale economies, especially as they're adding all these apps, all these users across all this
surface area.
Now, if you're an advertiser and you want to reach users across search or display or video,
Google is a one-stop shop.
Right.
You don't have to sort of independently spend operational time and headcount on all these
different platforms. You sort of get the one. And that's not even to mention the scale economy is
on the infrastructure side. We talked about last time. Or like, I mean, they show up in every business
here. But like, that's just one example. And the fact that the more advertisers there are and the more
users there are, the more profit Google makes because each little individual auction on every
individual search finds a maximal price. Yes. Network economies, YouTube, hello, more creators,
more viewers, creators make money from having views of their videos.
Application developers on Android and users on Android, the two-sided network economy is there.
Yes, everywhere.
Not to mention, in the core business too, in search, more users searching is more valuable
to me as an advertiser because I have a deeper pool of people I can advertise to.
So I can just deploy more dollars on your channel if it's working.
Yep.
Switching costs, how about Gmail?
Oh, I've got my last, uh,
20 years of email history in Gmail, all stored for free. Yeah, I'm not switching.
In the core business, there's not as much switching costs. I suppose there's a little bit of,
oh, because I've spent a lot of money, the targeting is very good at allocating my spend.
But the switching costs in the core business for an advertiser are not as prominent as other powers.
I don't think I continue to spend on Google because it's hard to.
to switch, I continue to spend on Google because they have all the high intent users for products
other than, you know, Amazon. That's one of the two big search boxes in the world where people
type in when they want to buy a product. So I'm going to advertise there. It has little to do
with switching costs, I think. Yeah. But for users of Gmail. Oh. And several of the other products,
like enormous. For users all across the board, yeah. I won't leave YouTube at this point.
The algorithm's dialed to my interests. Oh, yeah. That's a great point of switching costs of the
algorithm on YouTube.
Yep.
Branding, I think in the heyday of Google that we're talking about in this episode, when they're
launching all these incredible products, yes, these products won because they're incredible
and because they were free, but also, like, there was such a halo around the company.
Like, if there was a new Google product, I would be chomping at the bit to go try it.
Yeah, that's super true.
I remember I was desperate for Google Wave invites.
The product completely failed, but I was completely dazzled by it, and I was desperate to get
invite and access. The Google name meant something. Yep. And still does, by the way, which I think
held them back in AI for a while. They know the Google name means something, so they are reticent to
throw their name on it until they got kind of shoved off the cliff. Yep. Cornered resource.
Yes. Well, certainly heading into the AI era now. YouTube, the YouTube catalog you can
train on. Yeah. All the data they have. Yeah. It's funny. I was about to
say their infrastructure, but I think that's actually a scale economy. They've built out the infrastructure
they have so they can run all their products as cheaply as they can. Yep. I think the infrastructure
is also a process power. Yeah. In that, in the era we've been talking about, they could launch all
these products on their infrastructure just way cheaper than anyone else. You know what's a corner
resource? They have built internal software and systems that is better than what is available
outside of Google.
Hmm.
Great point.
A lot of the time, they even create open source projects that are similar to their
internal stuff, but they don't actually give away the internal stuff.
Inside Google, they still run Borg.
They run far less Kubernetes than they run Borg.
And Borg is part of the secret sauce.
Yeah.
When you talk to engineers who've left Google, they miss the infrastructure.
So Google has it all.
Yeah, all of them.
And we can name a lot more examples, but we've got to go.
All right. Playbook.
All right. I tried to get most of them in as we are going in the story.
The first is that Google really wanted to become a platform company.
And I was sort of noodling on, did they ever do this successfully?
And David, we sort of touched on this idea that they are advancing the platform of the web
without owning the platform of the web.
So if they didn't have Android, how would you answer the question, is Google a platform
company. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'd say it's sort of like a shadow platform company. It's like an
ecosystem company. Right. And even with Android, okay, great, they own the target development platform.
Their money is still made elsewhere. It's not a platform business. They may have a platform
orientation as a company. They build a bunch of stuff for developers to build their applications
on top of. But where their bread is butter is really as an advertising company. It's important
when push really comes to shove
on big strategic decisions
the company has to make.
Like Apple, pure play platform company,
Microsoft, pure play platform company.
They either sell software or hardware,
and then they need the platform around it
to bolster their sales.
Google's very indirect.
Yep.
All right, so that was one.
The other one is they make tons
of small acquisitions.
Famously, I mean,
that run in the 2010s,
aside from the big ones,
from YouTube, from Android,
from Double-Click from AdMob.
There was also what became Google Groups, spreadsheets,
docs, blogger.
They bought Applied Semantics with the patents
and some of the tech for AdSense.
They bought the technology for Google Maps.
They bought Urchin for Google Analytics.
Dodgeball, Feed Burner, Recapture,
slide, jambool, like.com,
widevine, ad meld, punched,
Zaget, Sparrow, Wave.
I mean, like, I could just keep going.
Oh, yeah.
There are hundreds of companies they bought.
In talking to folks in the research,
there was this amazing part of Google
Google culture that also fit the strategy perfectly of help the web and the rich web and
web apps bloom, come work at Google with these incredible people, meet your co-founders,
go start a startup, leave Google.
Right.
We will then reacquire you back into Google in a couple of years.
It happened dozens or hundreds of times.
I remember seeing this happen from the outside and thought Google is nuts to let this happen,
but I realize now, no, this was all part of the strategy.
Yeah.
It's all good for the web.
Yep.
You can run very indirect, generous, long-term strategies like that with a money printer like ad prints.
Yes.
I know I keep coming back to that, but that is at the core of what drives everything.
This one's a little bit less playbook, but just an observation.
I watched the Google Io keynote with glass, and I watched a bunch of glass content.
I even back in the day at a startup weekend launched a Google,
Glass app.
Oh, nice.
So, after watching all this glass content, and it's the butt of every joke now,
meta raybans and Google Glass are the same thing, feature-wise.
Yep.
The gestures on the side, the fact that it could take a photo.
I mean, Google Glass was a little more advanced.
It could run these very basic text-based apps.
But I'm sure when Meta launches their little hologram version of the glasses, that's going to be
eerily similar. So, like, of course you could say, oh, it's just timing. But here's the thing. Google's
made you look like a cyborg. Metas is for normal people. And there is no better metaphor for the
cultural difference between Facebook and Google than this. Google's a bunch of wacky academics
who did not really understand why this would make the product fail. Facebook is founded on the
idea that you're trying to be cool. Yeah. And went and did a partnership with Esselaerloreal Exotica to
get the tech into glasses that normal people wear.
Yes.
It was crazy watching these demos because I'm like,
these are the meta-AR demos.
It just happens to have a cool factor versus not.
Yep.
And then my last one is this idea that they did figure out a way
culturally to get people amped about just build great products.
Figure out how to do something really hard from an engineering perspective
that ends up being really useful
and ship things that people love.
It's not that you didn't have to think about a business model,
but a lot of the time for many years
after launching a product, you really didn't.
Yep, it's like we talked about earlier.
There was this thin layer of really, really, really tight,
really great strategy that was just like a few people
at the top of the company.
But below that, it was just make a great product.
Yes.
All right, I've got two for Playbook,
one that I'm going to make my quintessence.
This is what to underscore again.
We said this in the Android chapter,
but like, Android was the mother of all wins.
It was so big to win with Android.
Nobody stretches a business model across technology eras.
Nobody.
And Google did it.
In a dominant way where they are the dominant company
in the next era as well.
Yep.
It is the Google version.
of Azure from our Microsoft
series. It absolves any and all
sins. Not that there were many at Google. The only one
was Google Plus. The only way it could have
gone better is if instead of launching Android,
they launched the iPhone. And they also
got the iPhone profits
rather than just some
small dollars that
protected their core business.
Yep. That was my playbook.
And then my quintessence is
it is wild that this one company
has eight
products with over a billion users and started this era with just one search that didn't even
have a billion users yet but search Android Chrome YouTube Gmail maps drive photos and then if you
count the play store as separate from Android which Google does I think that's a bit of a stretch but
if you do then they have nine products with over a billion users and just for context
meta is the next highest count of
products in one company with over a billion users. They have four, the Blue App, WhatsApp,
Instagram, and Messenger. Metal likes to claim they have five. They like to say that MetaI in
aggregate has over a billion users embedded across all their products. Yeah, but this whole super
intelligence thing is an admission that the active users of MetaI is a little stretchy.
If the Play Store doesn't really count on its own, the MetaI for sure doesn't really count on
its own. So Meta has four. Apple, I think,
only has three, maybe four. So the three Apple has, for sure, are iPhone, IMessage, and Safari.
iPad, maybe. I don't think so. Mac, definitely not. I basically don't count any iPhone app because they all
come for free when you get the phone. Okay. So by your definition, Apple has one with iPhone.
I think Apple has one. Okay. All right. Let's take that same definition. How many of these came for free at Google?
Google search, Android, those are two completely different distribution channels, Chrome.
Yep. I don't think any of these came for free.
I mean, Google helped Chrome.
No, yeah, these are all independently have achieved billion-plus users.
Gmail and Google Drive sort of advantage each other, so I think you can sort of subtract one of those out.
Yeah, but it's not to the extent that I message is default with an iPhone.
Right. Maps is advantaged by Android. They ship a whole lot of maps, so, but probably whatever the phone
was would have a great Google Maps app.
Yep. Okay. All right. I buy it. Apple has one. Microsoft has two, Windows and LinkedIn.
Amazon doesn't have any billion user products. Google's got eight. Like, that's incredible.
Call it seven or six. I think it's reasonable to subtract it. Okay, fine. But still, that's exactly right.
Whatever. That's my point. This is my quintessence. This period at Google is a run like nobody's ever
Yeah, absolutely right.
All right. What you got?
So quintessence for me is the thing that I sort of can't stop thinking about from the episode.
And I decided this time, I knew what it was going in, and I decided to hide it all the way until the end.
So we haven't talked about this thing yet.
Oh, okay.
Almost all of Google's successful products are based on a core technology insight that is underneath the whole thing.
the type of insight that could be in an academic journal.
Someone told me this, and I've been using it as a little litmus test for
will a product work or not.
And as you look through, I mean, you look at the original search.
That is by definition, the page rank algorithm is a core technology insight.
I mean, they published it as an academic paper.
The way that the ad-based auction works is a core, it's almost mechanical.
and its elegance and its brilliance and its simplicity,
it is a technology insight that everything we talked about
in Google Part 1, our first episode,
then you look at everything that succeeded this episode,
Gmail, the way that they are able to do
a gigabyte of storage, Ajax, fast, responsive web application,
you look at maps and docs with real-time collaboration,
breakthrough core technology insight.
Yeah.
YouTube, uh...
Yeah, totally.
Yeah.
Serving video on demand of the entire world?
Absolutely.
Being able to scale that and make it a real going concern.
Chrome, four core technology insights, maybe six, maybe seven in the original comic.
Yep.
Android.
I can't name one magical core insight.
This one may kind of be the exception because, like, yeah, it's technically hard and all that.
But there's not like an elegant thing that's the reason that Android succeeded.
It was perfect execution in a lot of ways, strategically, distribution, marketing, partnerships.
Okay, wait, no, no, I got what it is.
It's the same thing as the iPhone.
It was an incredible achievement to wrestle OS10 into iOS and to get it to run on a battery-powered mobile device that fit in your pocket.
And Android did the same thing with Linux.
They wrestled Linux into a battery-powered mobile device that fits.
it's in your pocket.
Yeah.
Less of an elegant, satisfying core insight, I think, and not the reason that it worked.
I mean, not the reason why Android, unlike these other ones, there's a clear line between
the, it's almost like the Google products that succeed wildly, organically, except for Android,
are ones where there's almost no product.
The technology solution is just so incredible that it is directly the user experience
and you get the technology breakthrough as the experience.
Yeah.
Yeah, I sort of see where you going.
But then look at the other ones, Google Plus, Google Wave.
These are like products.
These are like user experiences that people come up with
that don't necessarily have a breakthrough technology underneath them.
Google Photos actually quite the opposite.
All of the AI stuff that's been happening on Google Photos for a very long time,
that's why it worked.
Like people wanted all these incredible magic features.
features that come with Google Photos.
It's funny, as someone told me this in the research, it has been sort of batting around
in my head, and then I'm reading Eric Schmidt's book, and Eric Schmidt said he would ask
PMs, what is your core technical insight that makes it all work?
And if there wasn't a good answer, he wouldn't fund the project.
They figured this out at Google, too.
It's a Googly thing that this genius technology is the product itself.
And if you try to craft some cool idea that you have that is not just directly translating tech breakthrough,
it's not going to be the type of product that succeeds at Google.
They don't know how.
Some people can make an Instagram, and those people are not Google.
Yeah.
Ironic that Kevin Sistram was a erstwhile Google employee who left to start a startup.
Yes.
Anyway, I think that has made it extremely clear to me,
when Google products succeed and when they fail.
Love it. Spot on.
All right. Carvouts?
Carvouts. I've got one, and then I've got my long-awaited follow-up.
Oh, my God. We've been awaiting with bated breath.
Listeners, what game console did David buy?
I'm going to make everybody wait for one more minute.
My actual carve-out for the episode is when we were in New York for Radio City.
family came, the girls came, and we stayed for the rest of the week after the show, and we took
the girls to the bluey experience at the camp store in New York City. And it was awesome. Lived up to
expectations, lived up to the hype. They basically have recreated the bluey house in this physical
space in New York City. The house is almost a character.
in the show, and they have recreated it, and they just let you and your kids in to roam free
in the house. Then you have a magical moment at the end of the experience. It was cool. Highly,
highly recommend if you're in the blue-y demographic and happen to be in New York. Okay. What game console
did you pick? I bought the Steam deck. I bought the Steam deck. And it's great, although I haven't,
truth be told, had much time to play it this past month with everything we've had going on at Radio City
and then preparing this episode.
But it's great.
How'd you pick?
What was the ultimate?
It ultimately came down to as much as I desperately wanted my older daughter
to be ready to play Mario Kart with me.
She's just not.
And so if you're buying a console for just you to enjoy,
you went with the Steam Deck.
Yeah.
I was like, I would probably enjoy the Steam Deck more.
Do you endorse it?
Do you recommend it?
Yeah, what Valve has done with the Steam Deck?
I didn't realize until buying it and using it is incredible.
They have abstracted a PC gaming machine into a console experience.
So I've always liked PC-type games, but I haven't been a PC gamer in many, many years
because, like, I'm not going to build a gaming machine.
Or even you can just buy one, but, like, I don't need another PC.
Where am I going to put it?
What am I going to do with it?
I want the console simplicity of just buy the damn thing, turn it on, buy the games, play them.
Right. Valve has created that in handheld form. It's awesome. You don't have to worry about any of the drivers or specs. It's really, really impressive.
All right. Good to know.
So I will buy a switch to, at some point, probably in the next year or so. But for now, Steam Deck. All right. What are your carabouts?
I've got three. Oh, great.
My first one, and I swear to God this is unrelated to their sponsorship, is Claude.
Amazing. It's so great. It's so good.
Using AI has completely changed the way that I prepare for these episodes now, and I cannot imagine going back.
I hear AI is a thing. I hear AI is a thing. So that's the first one. I just find myself in it all day now.
Two is the Sony RX100 VII, or seven. So I recently bought a different camera, the Fuji X100 VI or the six.
Yeah, that's what you had in New York.
Yeah. And it's great. It's like,
the internet's favorite camera. It has these amazing film simulation color profiles. It's like a
camera, though. I carry it around my neck because it's like, it's a camera that you hold and use,
and it's very fun shooting 35 millimeter equivalent. It feels like I'm taking pictures the way
that pictures were meant to be taken. It's not a full DSLR, but it is like a big thing.
Exactly. It's a handheld, but I wouldn't call it a pocket camera. Now, the funny thing is the thing
that I'm actually talking about is my carve-out is the Sony camera. Shield Monot tweeted, actually this
morning. I should have been preparing for this episode and I was like replying to him on Twitter instead
that he's been considering getting this Sony or another point and shoot camera. And I just kind of
remembered how much I love this camera. The Sony Arix 107 fits in my pocket. It's very small.
It has a giant zoom lens for its size. And I was just looking at some of the pictures that I've
taken with it. It's like the perfect thing to bring with a phone. Whenever I am space constrained,
which is usually. I mean, I just don't really want a camera around my neck. The perfect combo is bring a phone and bring the Sony. I am aware that it's not a full frame camera. I'm aware that it's not as photographery as my Fuji, but it is the most practical one for most things that I want to do. And for many, many shots, it is far superior to shooting on a camera phone. So I don't know. I just love it. It's a 2019 camera and they really need to come out with one that has USBC because it's annoying to charge. But other than that, it's just,
just awesome. So I highly recommend it.
There you're bringing it full circle on this episode. A point and shoot camera.
A point and shoot camera, especially paired with Lightroom has this great AI feature called Denoise that they launched and is now rolled out in production. It is incredible.
What it?
Then I have one more last one. A listener recently sent me, he started a clothing company called Kerasimi.
And it is an incredible garment. It is just this like really, really nice cashmere shirt. I've been wearing it all recording.
It's great on a cool day. It's great on a warm day. It's my current favorite shirt. And so I wanted to thank the listener that sent it to me and say you have built a very, the prices are high, so a very nice clothing company, but just excellent products.
Well, I've been staring at you from the past seven and a half hours here, and I've been thinking the whole time, God, Ben is looking good.
My normal thing, if I could just wear it every day, is a long sleeve, dark crew neck. It's just like, I don't have to think about it. You can look nice in it. It just,
goes with everything. It's, you know, the sort of capsule wardrobe idea. And this is the
sort of finest version of that that I've worn. It's really great. Kerasimi.
Nice.
All right. With that, listeners, our huge thanks to our partners this season, JPMorgan payments, trusted,
reliable payments infrastructure for your business no matter the scale. That's jpmorgon.com
slash acquired. Anthropic, the makers of Claude.caud.a.a.sacquired. Statsig, the best way to do
experimentation and more, as
product development team, that's Statsig.com
slash acquired, and Versel,
your complete platform for web development,
and V0.
That is, versl.com slash acquired.
Click the links in the show notes to learn more.
We have a bunch of people to thank
for contributing to this episode.
Yes, yes, we do.
Hiroshi Lockheimer, Tim Armstrong,
Sam Shillis, Hunter Walk,
Nick Fox, Shona Brown,
Clay Bevoir, a bunch of folks
who helped a little bit here,
but more going to be for the next episode, Max Ross, Greg Carrado, Demis Asabas, and then, Ben, you had a bunch of folks who you spoke to as well.
Yeah. As always, I want to thank Arvin Navarotnam from Worldly Partners for his excellent write-up, which you can find linked in the show notes.
And also Paul Bukite, creator of Gmail, Bill Corrin, Jonathan Rochelle, Bradley Horowitz, John Henke, Ben Idelson, Isar Lipkowitz, and Ben Liebald.
And that is in addition to, as always, the many folks who helped us whose names we can't say here, but no, you are appreciated.
Yes.
And thanks to all of you for listening.
Seriously.
If you like this episode and you're like, oh, wait, there's a Google episode before this.
Most of you have probably listened, but if you have not, go check out our first episode on the origin of Google and the creation of the search engine and the search business.
And of course, our Microsoft series, part one, part two, in an interview.
you with Steve Ballmer.
If you want the other side of the story to everything we talked about here.
In addition, our giant episode on meta is probably pretty relevant, and we referenced it
several times.
After this episode, check out ACQ2, our second show where we talk to founders and CEOs
building businesses and areas that we have covered on the show.
Our last one was with Google Legends, really industry legends, Brett Taylor and Clay
Beauvoir about the current state of AI and where we are headed.
So search ACQ2 in any podcast.
player. Come chat with us in the Slack. That's Acquired.fm slash Slack. And join the email list
for all the excellent email goodies, including voting on episodes for this fall.
Woo-hoo. With that, listeners, we'll see you next time. We'll see you next time.
Who got the truth? Is it you? Is it you? Is it you? Who got the truth now?
You know,