Gen Y takes to Google Apps
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| Before using Google spreadsheets, Robert Khoo used a whiteboard to plan a major gaming expo. Image: Penny Arcade Expo |
By Yi-Wyn Yen
While Google struggles to sell Google Apps, its web-based version of Microsoft Office and Outlook e-mail, to large corporations, it has found success with young entrepreneurs. Each day 6,000 businesses are signing up for Google Apps, and more than 10 million office workers are using the company’s office suite, according to Matthew Glotzbach, the product management director for Google Enterprise.
The adoption is driven by Generation Y entrepreneurs like Aida Mollenkamp and Noah Starr, two twentysomething cohosts who feature Gmail on the Food Network’s new interactive show “Ask Aida.” Then there’s young business owners like Robert Khoo, a 28-year-old from Seattle. Khoo is the president of operations for Penny Arcade Expo, a three-day confab in Seattle for 55,000 video game enthusiasts that is sponsored by big corporations like Microsoft (MSFT), Electronic Arts, and Activision Blizzard.
Khoo says Google Apps has helped the company scale the conference, which has doubled in size every year since 2004. Khoo and his coworkers used to use a large whiteboard to plan the gaming conference as they found it a better alternative than e-mailing a single Microsoft Excel back and forth.
But he says, “You couldn’t work on it when you were traveling. There was no real-time data.” Khoo switched to Google spreadsheets last June. “We needed something where everyone can collaborate at the same time and track changes. This has completely changed the way we do business.”
Though Google doesn’t track the demographics of Google Apps users, company executives say a Web 2.0 savvy generation is a major growth market. They insist that young trendsetters who grow up on Internet-based consumer products like Twitter, Facebook, and iChat, expect similar tools in the workplace. Gmail can turn an e-mail into a chat session when the other person is online and Google Docs allows multiple users to collaborate on files at the same time.
Google (GOOG) has barely made a dent in the office software market since launching Google Apps 18 months ago. The company earned $4 million from Google Apps compared to Microsoft Office’s $12.2 billion in 2007, according to research firm Gartner. But Google is banking that the Gen Y workforce who want more web-based solutions will help the company close the gap. “We’re not waiting 15 to 20 years. The generation of new [office apps] users is already here,” says Glotzbach.
Not everyone has faith that Gen Y office workers and business owners will dramatically shake Microsoft from its strong grip on the desktop software market.
“Google will get some bump from a younger generation coming into the workforce, but I don’t think that will switch things as broadly as Google thinks,” says Burton Group analyst Guy Creese. “Google is saying, cloud computing is the way of the future and software is dead. But it’s not like companies have been making stupid decisions for the past 20 years. That’s too binary of a view.”
Actually, FG, I do get it. I remember when LANs came along and they wouldn’t stay up, had terrible security, etc. Everyone in the mainframe and minicomputer community stood around and laughed. Five years later, LANs had corrected a lot of their shortcomings and ten years later they reigned. I just don’t think the change will happen as quickly as Google wants or that Google is destined to win the market. A company that built a SaaS solution from the get go to enterprise requirements–rather than dressing up a consumer solution and claiming it’s fit for large enterprise primetime–could clean Google’s clock.
Guy Creese must be part of the ‘older’ generation, and clearly he doesn’t get it. I remember when we first started getting thing like PC’s and email in the workplace, and a lot of older guys like him at the time said “we don’t need these new fangled things, my typewriter works just fine.” Wake up Guy…
Google has written several whitepapers that describe how companies, both large and small, can benefit from using the suite of Google Apps. Titles include Curbing Costs with Google Apps and Google Apps: Quick Tour
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I just don’t see what all the brewhaha is about…All fine and good…but when internet connectivity goes down…or Google’s servers have a problem…your business is SHUT DOWN! ZERO WORK…Cloud computing fills a niche and that is it. Until we have a world where nothing ever breaks there must be some way available to keep working. When software resides locally on the PC it allows work to be done both on and offline! When Google finds a way to provide the SaaS OFFLINE then they might have something work talking about! Till then this is nothing but a nice marketing ploy by the worlds largest SEARCH ENGINE!