Facebook’s Messenger And The Challenge To Google’s Search Dominance
When Facebook announced M—an A.I.-powered personal assistant that lives inside Messenger—it enacted a grave challenge for Google.
Indeed, if Facebook can successfully scale M to its entire audience (and WhatsApp’s, as well), this new product represents a direct assault on search and AdWords—the lifeblood of Google’s business.
To understand how a digital personal assistant that lives inside a mobile messaging app represents a disruptive threat to Google, let’s look at why Google is in this situation in the first place.
Google faces the classic innovator’s dilemma; a dire challenge
The recently-Alphabetized technology behemoth has built a mega-business around AdWords, and for most of the history of this businesses’ existence, it’s been generating billions and billions of dollars of delicious profit.
Indeed, Google’s core business is so profitable that it almost singlehandedly fuels all of Google’s wildly-ambitious and occasionally-awesome forays into things like internet infrastructure, life extension, augmented reality, and self-driving cars.
The massive AdWords money machine is, of course, built on top of a remarkable search product that works so well and so fast that most of the internet-connected population of Earth relies on it every day to extract the information, products, and services they want or need from the the vast expanses of the web.
But therein lies the rub: somewhere in the recesses of its collective corporate mind, Google knows that keyword search—the current foundation of its empire—is not the future.
Indeed, as former Googler and current Yahoo CEO, Marissa Mayer, told John Battelle when he was writing a book on your friendly neighborhood search giant years ago, “search is only 5% solved.”
While Google’s search technology has incorporated YouTube, Maps, and Knowledge since Mayer said this, the statement is as true today as it was then: Google’s fundamental product experience still involves entering a few words into a search box and getting back a list of relevant links.
Because Larry Page and Sergey Brin are visionaries, they know that the next-generation solution to the problem of search looks less like a clickable list of links and more like a primitive Star Trek computer or an early version of the A.I. from the movie Her.
But massive ships with hundreds of billions of dollars in market capitalization are hard to turn.
Facebook vs Google; The Challenge
Indeed, as one former Google Now engineer [recently told Mark Bergen at Re:Code after political infighting and corporate shuffling lead to Google Now losing prominence], “This is how big companies work.”
The subsequent exodus of Google Now’s team doesn’t portend well for Google’s stake in the future of search, because Now was closest thing to the future of search that the company has produced to date.
The subsequent exodus of Google Now’s team doesn’t portend well for Google’s stake in the future of search, because Now was closest thing to the future of search that the company has produced to date.
The future of search is an intelligent digital assistant that can complete tasks
Like Google today, the search engine of the future will be able to mine the vast expanses of the internet for relevant information and deliver it to you in milliseconds.
But much unlike today’s Google, the future’s search engine will behave like a digital personal assistant that can understand and predict your needs, then deliver on them without requiring you to navigate to any web pages or tap around a bunch of apps.
When you do ask for something, this search engine will not respond with a list of blueish links. Instead, it will respond with a definitive result or a completed task. When it doesn’t have the definitive result or can’t complete the task on the first pass, it will ask you further questions to get closer and closer, until the machine gets it right.
Facebook vs Google; The Challenge
We’ve known for a while that Facebook has been investing heavily in deep learning and other forms of A.I.
But until last month, we didn’t know what all the rumpus was about.
Now we do: Facebook is testing an A.I.-powered personal assistant inside of Messenger, itself. This assistant can book appointments, order gifts, make restaurant and travel reservations, and more.
Without search and mapping technologies and access to your calendar and inbox, Facebook’s A.I. assistant won’t be able to do all of the things in the scenarios above, but M is officially a contender. To understand why M (and products like it) pose a threat to Google, it helps to consider why AdWords became such a valuable asset in the first place:
On the internet, search has long been the most direct bridge between someone’s intent and the transaction where that intent is fulfilled.
This transaction could be something free, like reading an article or blog post, where attention is the currency being exchanged.
It could be something in between free and paid: like downloading a piece of content in exchange for contact information.
It could also just be paid: buying a product or service right from the web.
Facebook vs Google; The Challenge
Because Google controls the middle of the bridge between your intention to transact and the final transaction, it can charge businesses who want a piece a very high toll. “Want to capture that lucrative intent? Pay me.”
But an A.I. personal assistant that goes out and completes transactions for you disrupts that entire process.
If you can simply tell a digital assistant to buy you tickets to a movie, order you a pizza, schedule a car repair, or even get you an insurance quote, there’s no longer any need to click a link or navigate to a webpage.
Without a page of links between your intent and the transaction, there’s nowhere for AdWords to show up!
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