Maybe Amazon Will Just Put Google Out Of Business Now, Because Why Not?
Boy, this wasn’t a great day for Google in terms of news.
Midway through the session, the Wall Street Journal reported that hundreds of thousands of users might have had their private Google+ data exposed. Once they (Google) figured that out, a decision was apparently made not to disclose it for fear of exacerbating regulatory concerns and damaging the company’s reputation.
Minutes later, Google announced they’ll be shuttering Google+ for consumers.
Needless to say, that doesn’t bode particularly well from a trust perspective at a time when America’s tech giants are under fire for data misuse and it also comes amid accusations that Google deliberately programs algos to bias search results against conservative media.
Later Monday, CNBC reported that advertisers are abandoning Google in droves in favor of Amazon. That, according to what the network says are the accounts of “execs at multiple media agencies”.
Specifically, CNBC’s reporting indicates that some advertisers are shifting “more than half” of their advertising budget to Amazon from Google.
There are of course all manner of caveats (obviously some brands are more amenable to Amazon than others) but it looks like the whispers CNBC is hearing do in fact reflect shifting preferences, even if Google doesn’t yet see an epochal shift. For instance, one unnamed Google ad sales manager is quoted as follows:
Leadership is definitely concerned but [it’s] not a huge threat right now.
The article is based on conversations with higher-ups at a half-dozen media agencies, all of which told a similar story about the extent to which Amazon offers a more straightforward experience. Consider this excerpt:
Another said clients appreciate Amazon is a seamless shopping experience. Using a Google search ad to lead to a purchase may require a person to set up an account and input their credit card information with a separate website. Especially for smaller brands, there’s not really an advantage between selling direct to the consumer versus selling through Amazon.
Clearly, this is all related to Amazon’s dominance in consumer goods and it makes sense. Why not just advertise where consumers actually spend?
That gets at the heart of the whole thing: Once Jeff Bezos expands into enough categories to where he can realistically say that if you want it, you can buy it on Amazon (whether it’s consumer goods, services or whatever else), it’s not entirely clear why everyone wouldn’t just advertise with him. Here’s CNBC underscoring that point:
Not everything is sold on Amazon — yet. Large advertising categories like auto, travel and some entertainment, including ticketed events like movies or sporting events, still don’t conduct direct sales on the platform. Those companies don’t have any reason to advertise on Amazon, while Google search still drives a lot of direct sales.
You can be absolutely sure that Bezos will “correct” the “problem” of “not everything [being] sold on Amazon” sooner or later. And when he does, there’s going to be a helluva value proposition for advertisers who want to seamlessly integrate efforts to drive sales on a platform where they are already selling to customers who already have an account.
The only way for Google to mitigate that eventuality is to partner with retailers and create some kind of integrated experience of their own (which they’ve tried to do with Google Shopping), but the idea that they’re going to be able to compete with Bezos on his own territory seems laughable.
And see, that’s the rub for everyone who isn’t Jeff Bezos: You have no hope of competing with him on his turf, but he continually encroaches on yours, often so successfully that he drives you clean out of business.
Disclosure: None of what I write here is to be construed as advice to buy or sell any kind of asset. It is merely my personal and not my professional opinion. Any asset can go to zero.
If Amazon is putting anyone out of business in advertising it's Facebook. Google makes money on all types of search and most of it is information. Also Amazon is more likely to compete against eBay than Google. There is some overlap with voice enabled searches, but Amazon has quite a ways to go and I'm not sure how much trust they will have feeding consumers their wares from voice chats. Google sells things but this is not their primary business and what they sell is a spin off of their solidifying their search. That is why they got into cell phones and voice chatting.
Amazon's real competitors are real and growing in ability including Walmart, Costco, and the milieu of other large online etailers. Add money is a branch of Amazon, but if it becomes its bread and butter then its competitors that aren't selling their customers for leads and leaching off their vendors will have some advantage finally.