
Google
plans to keep making ambitious and costly bets on futuristic products,
even if it means shelving some of its most beloved projects. The
Internet search company acknowledged for the first time on Thursday
major problems with its Google Glass wearable computer, noting that it
was time for a “pause” and a strategy “reset.”
The
comments by Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette during Thursday’s
quarterly results conference call struck a decidedly different tone from
Google’s talk earlier this month of Glass “graduating” from the
company’s labs into a separate division.
Pichette’s
admission of Glass’ failings was particularly noteworthy given that the
product has been long championed by Google co-founder Sergey Brin. As
growth in Google’s main search advertising business slows, the company
needs to reassure investors it can make clear and sober investment
decisions, analysts said.
“They’re
trying to make the point that they’re investing in areas that produce
results,” said Colin Gillis, a BGC Partners analyst.
“You
want them to be iterating. But you want them to shut things down things
that aren’t working. Don’t throw money into dead holes.”
When
Google co-founder Larry Page returned to the chief executive role in
2011 he undertook a series of “spring cleanings,” publicly pulling the
plug on under-performing projects such as online encyclopedia Knol and a
service that let consumers monitor their home energy consumption.
Under
Page’s tenure, Google is spending big on a variety of projects such as
self-driving cars, solar-powered balloons that deliver Internet access,
robotics and healthcare. Many of these projects are unlikely to deliver a
payoff for years, if at all.
CFO
Pichette made it clear on Thursday that the 18 percent revenue growth
from Google’s websites during the fourth quarter gives the company
“license” to continue investing in long-term projects.
But
he cited the differing fates of two high-profile projects to show Wall
Street that Google remained disciplined in its spending.
Google
Fiber, a high-speed Internet access service which launched in Kansas
City in 2012, recently announced plans to expand to four additional
cities – a sign of success.
Glass,
by contrast, is a project that has not been able to “hit its hurdles”
despite its great promise, Pichette explained. Google halted consumer
sales of Glass earlier this month, but said it would continue to sell
the product to businesses.
“Maybe
that was the message they’re giving, that even if it’s one of our pet
projects, we are not afraid to come out and just kill it,” said B. Riley
& Co analyst Sameet Sinha.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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