Innovation without Invention: What's the fuss about Google+?
What do you think of Google+, Google’s recent entry into the world of social media? Is this a radical departure for the world’s dominant search engine? Or is it an incremental enhancement that adds new features to Google’s existing product lines? Is this an innovative leap that threatens to demolish competitors? Or is it merely a “Facebook compatible” offering that’s been tossed into the market just because Google can?
Before we can decide, we have to take a closer look at Google+. Is it a product? A platform? An entirely new category of social media? If nothing else, there appears to be healthy demand for it given that in a mere two months, Google+ has acquired 25 million users (consider that it took Facebook 3 years and Twitter 30 months to do the same). Regardless, the jury is still out on whether Google+ is a passing fad or a real, long term threat to companies like Facebook.
First off, advertisers like it! Perhaps more important than its search engine capabilities, Google has developed the world’s most efficient and advanced advertising platform. And Google+ just adds to those capabilities. Unlike Facebook and Twitter, Google+ has created a richer, more granular platform where users fill out their preferences for more personalized ads, offering greater predictability for advertisers. Sparks exercises users’ preferences, demographics, and behaviors to generate a news feed with stories, articles, blogs, and video clips tailored to personal preferences. Users no longer have to scour multiple sources to keep up to date on their interests. This clearly makes being informed about what you want to be informed about quicker, but does it also narrow users' “fields of vision” and potentially limit their world views?
Next, the Google+ tagline: “real life sharing, rethought for the web” puts the emphasis squarely on human relationships. With virtual hangouts, users can sit at their computers and “hangout” with buddies via video chat. The idea is to eliminate distance and bring video and chat together in the context of social media, which in turn may allow Google+ to eclipse products like Webex, Facetime and Skype, leaving these vendors wondering what happened.
Speaking of making plans with friends, Huddle, a feature targeted at mobile users, is also worth mentioning. Instead of texting friends individually, Google+ allows users to message their friends and make weekend plans in a single chat. While this is not so different from sending a Facebook message or even a mass text on your iPhone, the name is catchy and Google is heavily marketing it as an alternative use of their platform.
Net net? Google+ allows users to physically group friends, family members, and colleagues in Circles and choose what content they share and with whom. It creates a space for virtual hangouts as well as personalized reading guides and advertising. Cool and convenient? Yes. But is it innovative? The major innovation we see is in the packaging of interesting features. It's another great example of the difference between innovation and invention. Google+ innovates without invention, leveraging the good work and success of other products. Regardless, if you want to hang out for real, get off the couch and go meet your friends at your local bar or restaurant.







