March 10, 2008 10:00 AM PDT

How Google's counterculture changes everything

by Don Reisinger
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In the world of online services and editorial content, a term known as "stickiness" becomes the rallying cry of Webmasters and marketers alike. In essence, these people are fearful that if they lose visitors on the site, they'll never get them back. But for some reason, Google doesn't feel that way. In fact, it's more than happy to send you out in the wild.

Why is that? Why has Google always been a company that has single-handedly taken the tried and true mentality of Web site owners for years and turned it upside down. On top of that, why has the company been able to succeed if conventional wisdom suggests that should never happen?

Maybe because the old idea of keeping people on the site isn't necessarily the best way to go. Perhaps users want to use a service that acts as a means to an end instead of a vehicle of infinite knowledge. Maybe users are sick and tired of sticky services and want nothing more than to bounce around the Web in search of the very best content no matter where it is.

Have consumer interests changed or is Google just a search engine and, thus, a place where the inherent task of the service is to move people along? According to one Google representative, the counterculture was bred out of the company's drive to get people out of the way on search.

And while it's plain to see Google (and, obviously, other search engines) employing this "push" mentality to search, it may not be so easy to see on its other services. For example, I'm not too sure how that push mentality relates to Gmail at face value. But when you consider the fact that you can set up a Gmail account and use it on any other service, it quickly bears fruit. What about Picasa? Sure, you keep coming back to use the service, but it's for a reason--you want a better-looking picture and get out of there as quickly as possible.

And it's this idea of speed and the length of time you can get in and get out that makes this counterculture so interesting. Although certain services attempt to do the same thing as Google, the speed with which you can find or do exactly what you want and be on to the next thing is easily what sets Sergey and Larry's company apart.

The company does that with its search, does it with Gmail, does it with Reader, does it with Picasa, does it with Docs, and the list goes on. In fact, Google is probably the largest online firm in the world that does as much as it can to get you off its pages. Doesn't that seem at all counterintuitive?

But perhaps most fascinating is the inherent risk that piggybacks on the counterculture mentality Google is so quick to mention. After all, if just about every Web site on the Net says users should be kept on those pages for fear of losing them to something better, what does it say about Google when it wants users to go out and find something?

In essence, this is a company that has the guts to let you do what you want and hope that you will come back because the service is much better than anything else available.

But if nothing else, this counterculture speaks to something that many in this business simply don't want to mention--readers and Web surfers simply aren't trusted and need to be lured into more and more pages so they will stay at the site. Simply put, the average Internet user isn't trusted and never has been. And yet, when they finally are trusted, good things happen to the company who trusts them.

But if nothing else, Google has shown that trust can go a long way and it shouldn't be abandoned because the Old Guard subscribed to a faulty belief that users need to be kept on a site for as long as possible. Everything on the Internet is a means to an end and never the end itself. Every single person reads editorial content, searches Google, modifies pictures, and listens to music for a reason. And to think that a particular site is that reason is both misguided and dumb.

Google is on to something with its counterculture and should be followed by more companies than just search engines. The Internet has changed and no site is safe from the perils of stickiness.

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has written about everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Don is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and posts at The Digital Home. He is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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by john55440 March 10, 2008 1:46 PM PDT
There's not much "stickiness" to Google's stock price either (grin), which fell another 4.5% today to $413, from a 52 week high of $747.
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by jjbraunius March 10, 2008 2:21 PM PDT
As long as Google gets bundled as the default search engine for Safari and Firefox I don't really see the non-stickiness per se. It is just a different kind of "stickiness"
Reply to this comment
by aztec92154 March 10, 2008 3:36 PM PDT
I agree... In fact, Google is bundled with:

Browsers
- Safari
- Firefox
- Opera

Cell Phones
- iPhone
- Windows Mobile
- BlackBerry
- Nokia SmartPhones
- Other phones

OS's
- Android OS
- Mac OS X (spotlight for computer, but google is preferred for internet)
- Unix ( google is preferred among this audience and its apps )

Google search is similar to Apples iPod, or HP's printers in that it is simple and easy solution to use. My mom uses the Google search to type in URL's because it "always works". As long as they keep the single logo and search page simple they will be fine. THEY MUST NOT FOLLOW YAHOO's footsteps and build a "directory". I'll keep coming back if they keep it simple.
by ComLink March 11, 2008 10:39 AM PDT
Some valid points. It also seems to me that this has a lot to do with simple freedom, and not feeling trapped into any one 'service' to rely on. Just like the FOSS software movement, people seem to gravitate where they don't feel locked in. Very human nature-esque IMHO.
Reply to this comment
by Codonology March 11, 2008 10:50 AM PDT
A true or potential concept search tool never need to stick to any specific web content from a specific web address. It sticks to a general consensus "clouds" or structured synonyms, which I call "Codon" based on the theory of Codonology. (www.Codonology.com)

Have a good future!
Hua Fang, MD
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by manodud March 11, 2008 11:22 AM PDT
Isn't the counterculture thing built upon a sort of 'stickiness'? What is stickiness then? Isn't going back to google everytime I want to make a search "stickiness"? If a user finds out tomorrow that Ask searches better than Google and keeps going back to ask.com, in my opinion that would still kind of uphold the beliefs of the old gaurd...
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by John_ChilmarkResearch March 11, 2008 12:16 PM PDT
I like the overall point you are making, and most particularly, the need for Web-master marketers to trust their visitors and not be so focused on stickiness. But what you are missing is that indeed Google is promoting a form of stickiness by building out more value/reasons to visit their website going from Search, to Communities, to Photo-sharing, Gmail, Google docs and most recently Google Health. All of these initiatives bring the user back over and over again because it brings them value.

I'm a perfect example with my Firefox now showing four open tabs that are Google centric (two Gmail accts, iGoogle, Google calendar) and let's not forget the embedded Google search in Firefox itself.

That's a lot of Google, that's a lot of stickiness.
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by RonC32-ASA March 11, 2008 1:07 PM PDT
Aaah but John, what you seem to be missing that all four of those open tabs you mention are there only because you choose to put them there. You did acknowledge that they are there because of their value,. FREEDOM of choice is what Google offers us.

If you want to see true "stickiness", do a simple search in Brand X, "AOL". I love Google's kind of 'stickiness'.
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by ourmonmouth March 26, 2008 6:42 AM PDT
Google could care less if they keep you on the page. User behavior data is far more valuable to them. Always follow the $. You like cute little dog sites? I bet they have a hell of a lot of ads to show you.
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About The Digital Home

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has covered everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Besides his work with CNET, Don's work has been featured in a variety of other publications including PC World and a host of Ziff-Davis publications.

Don writes product reviews for InformationWeek and is a regular contributor to Processor Magazine. You can visit his personal site at DonReisinger.com or if you would like to email Don with questions or comments, drop him a line at CNETDigitalHome@gmail.com. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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