On Google's Franchise (and McCormick's)
Google has a competitive advantage. In fact, one might even say
it has a franchise in web search. I wouldn't say that. I mean,
Google does have a franchise; but, it doesn't have a monopoly on
web search and never will. There are real problems with Google's
model that are often overlooked. It does a poor job of finding
certain sites that are difficult to describe in keywords. For
this reason, there may still be a market for web search in the
form of specialized niche directories and in some of these
"social search engines" (e.g., Stumble Upon) for many years to
come.
I'm not suggesting any of these services will be as successful
as Google; I'm sure they won't be. I am simply pointing out that
there is a difference between a need and the means by which that
need is satisfied. Even as the dominant search player, Google
will only have a franchise on the means (keyword search); it
will not have a franchise on the need (finding stuff on the
web). Also, Google can not, at present, rightly be called the
dominant search player. There is no dominant player in search.
Google is the leading search player. It is also the catalyst for
many changes in search. But, it is not yet the dominant player
in search the way McCormick (MKC) is the dominant U.S. spice
producer.
Looking at McCormick's franchise is actually a pretty good way
of evaluating Google's. Why do I say McCormick is the dominant
player (domestically) in spice, but Google is not yet the
dominant player in search? There are a few reasons.
McCormick has a 45% share of the U.S. retail spice market. Its
closest competitor has a 12% market share. We may differ about
exactly how the web search pie is carved up. But, I think we can
agree that Google's share of the market is less than 45%, and
that at least two of its competitors have a share of the market
greater than 12%. So, Google's position differs from McCormick's
in two material respects (already). Google has a smaller slice
of the pie, and the search market is less fragmented than the
spice market.
The spice market is an upside down funnel. The few producers are
at the top. They feed their products through three distribution
paths: retail, industry, and restaurants. In each case, the
shape of the upside down funnel remains intact, because the
widening happens at the very end. The ultimate consumer of
McCormick's product doesn't get to choose from all available
spices. His choice is always indirect. He picks a grocery store,
a food product, or a restaurant. Then, must choose from the
spices that particular supermarket chooses to carry, or the
restaurant he frequents chooses to use (and/or make available).
In search the story's a little different. There is still
something of an upside down funnel shape in search. Although, it
is less pronounced than it was a few years ago. Search results
are fed through dependent sites that searchers visit. But, it is
the searcher who chooses the dependent sites. A few of these
dependent sites account for a large part of all searches. That
is very different from the spice market, where no supermarket or
restaurant chain accounts for a large part of all spice
consumption - none even comes close. So, the searcher has a much
bigger role in choosing his search provider than the spice
consumer has in choosing his spice provider. Even though it is
true you are sometimes searching without knowing Google is the
search provider, the situation is nothing like it is at
McCormick. When eating a meal you aren't thinking about
McCormick. Quite often, however, you are using a McCormick
product. Whether it was in that package of spices you used to
cook a meal at home, or in that manufactured food product, or in
the dish you ordered at the restaurant, you are a consuming a
McCormick product.
What matters as far as the investor is concerned is that the
ultimate consumer of McCormick's product rarely makes an active,
unfettered choice to consume that product over all other
competing products (or even many competing products). The
closest he comes to making such a choice is at the supermarket;
though even there, the decision of how much shelf space to
allocate to each company's products was made for him. To use
Google, the first time searcher must make an active, unfettered
choice.
Finally, there is the matter of infrastructure. This consists of
two parts: production and distribution. McCormick has an
existing production infrastructure which is helpful as far as
costs are concerned, but isn't especially valuable. It could be
duplicated by a new entrant with deep pockets. McCormick's
distribution infrastructure is almost impossible to duplicate.
It is worth far more than it cost McCormick to create it. Prying
McCormick's customers (situated at the narrow of that inverted
funnel) away from the company's products would not be easy. This
distribution infrastructure gives solidity to McCormick's spice
franchise in the U.S. In some instances, it will also help
McCormick aboard (as some of the company's customers are
expanding globally and will be inclined to stick with McCormick
in their overseas operations).
Google's production infrastructure (the algorithm and the index)
is easy to duplicate and will become even easier to duplicate in
the future. There isn't much of a barrier to entry here. Google
may currently offer the best search service around, but there is
no reason to believe this will always be the case. Distribution
is very often the most valuable part of any franchise (it is
usually the part that is hardest to duplicate).
So, the natural question is: in the world of search, if you
build it will they come? Will the best search engine always
attract the most searchers? Probably not. That's good for
Google, because it won't always be the best search engine.
Google has a great brand. Whatever value is in Google comes from
that brand. That brand is what will keep searchers from flocking
to the inevitable newer, better search engine.
All of Google's revenues are ultimately dependant upon
attracting searches. Getting those searches requires two things.
First, millions of people must make the active, unfettered
choice to search Google. Then, those millions of people must
keep searching with Google. The brand is the key to step one.
The service is the key to step two. Search customers are sticky.
But, they probably aren't as sticky as we think. It's very easy
to take immediate action on the web (just click a link).
Switching away from Google isn't like switching away from
Windows.
That leaves the brand. True, when you think search, you think
Google. But, is that brand worth $120 billion? No - and neither
is Google.