Google vs. Facebook… and the rest
By Tom Brewster,
ANALYSIS: We shouldn't be all that surprised by Facebook's attempts to besmirch Google's reputation.
Facebook may have used some 'dirty' tricks with its PR efforts against its rival, but it isn’t the only company which has gone for the search giant’s jugular in recent times.
More generally, such clandestine activity goes on in almost every industry. Unfortunately for the perpetrators, when you get found out it can cause some serious problems.
The social network has denied the claim its project with WPP owned Burson-Marstellar was actually a "smear campaign," but the damage has been done.
Facebook was caught out and the whole thing has blown up in Mark Zuckerburg’s face. The social network has not only damaged its own reputation, it has made Google look good.
It may be wise for companies to lay off Google for a little while, however. It’s a company that many love. And people don’t like seeing their loved ones hurt.
Furthermore, Facebook has not only shown what lengths rivals will go to hurt Google, it has confirmed how much the world’s tech giants fear Larry Page’s firm.
Google giggling?
Google will be giggling about this gaffe, not to mention the media furore surrounding it. Without doing anything at all, Google has won a battle it didn’t even know it was fighting.
Page and Co have had to cope with attacks from competitors plenty of times in the past, whether they were in the public sphere or in court.
It’s a company that is spreading itself into numerous markets, threatening to disrupt various industries and upset big players. With success comes envy from others and Google executives will know that.
Just look at the Chromebook – it’s another area where Google will look to steal OS market share from the likes of Apple and Microsoft. Given how well Android has done thus far and its predicted dominance in the smartphone space, it will come as no surprise if Chrome-based laptops become big players too. So expect the anti-Chromebook comments to start spurting out this summer when the devices arrive.
As for Facebook, Zuckerburg’s company wants a bigger slice of the advertising pie. Google has around 43 per cent of the advertising market in the US, compared to Facebook’s seven per cent. The latter will obviously want to challenge Google's dominance here. Otherwise, the two have little to compete for when it comes to sales.
With plenty of clout now behind it, Google could enter any sphere and worry the market’s big players.
“Google is a company many fear and in the recent past it's managed to put the wind up Microsoft, Apple and Nokia to name just a few - and they're companies who aren't easily scared,” Mark Jackson, head of corporate at PR firm Lucre, told IT PRO.
“I think that fear stems from a number of things not least of which is Google's brand which has become one of the most powerful in the 21st century and I suspect many companies worry that Google will use its power and influence to target their businesses.”
Sarah Lafferty, co-founder of Round Earth Consulting, which looks after PR for enterprise software companies, went as far to say there may be a widespread “anti-Google campaign” underway.
In particular, Lafferty pointed to attacks on Google from Glenn Beck, who claimed the search firm was in bed with the US Government, and a Daily Mail article with similar insinuations.
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