Google Still Has Long Way to Go in the Enterprise
- 07 January, 2008 12:27
- Comments
While Google continues to clean up in the search engine market on the Web — far outpacing its closest rivals — the enterprise search market is a much different story, according to analysts, who say Google has a lot to learn about bringing its search technology into large enterprises.
In the consumer search market, the Internet company's dominance could not be more pronounced. Recent numbers by Hitwise, a research firm that measures search engine audiences, showed that Google continues its chokehold on the consumer search market, accounting for 65 percent of all searches in the US last month. The nearest rival, Yahoo, trailed Google with 21 percent, followed by MSN.com (7 percent) and Ask.com (4 percent).
Google showed a 5 percent increase over last year, while Yahoo grew by 1 percent.
But search experts say Google's dominance on the consumer search market won't translate into significant market share among business users until it customizes its Search Appliance to meet the needs of old legacy systems and complex IT infrastructures. According to analysts, Google's Search Appliance lacks good administration features for corporate IT departments as they try to ensure that the tool connects properly with back-end databases that have been around for years (or, in some cases, decades).
"You can't just plug it in and have it work," says Sue Feldman, an IDC analyst who specializes in search.
Feldman estimates that the Google search appliance for businesses accounts for only 1 percent (or less) of the company's overall revenue of $US10 billion.
Meanwhile, Chris Sherman, president of consultancy Searchwise, says that other players in the corporate search market, such as Verity, Autonomy and Fast, have worked at perfecting customized user interfaces and strong back-end support to capitalize on Google's weaknesses.
"Google allows tweaks to its user interface, but they don't give you anywhere near the customization that others [enterprise search companies] do," he says.
In addition, Microsoft's enterprise search server has been reviewed favourably by analysts, who say it can scale to many different types of servers and gives IT the administration access features it wants from a search appliance.
IDC's Feldman says that kind of customization includes better use of categorizing information (think: tagging and taxonomies on the Web), not just relying on the user to type in the specific keyword. While Feldman notes Google has begun to add such capabilities, "they haven't caught up just yet".
Sherman says that Google also needs to dedicate more sales personnel to selling the Search Appliance to corporate IT leaders with budgetary discretion. "The enterprise search companies with good market share have sales forces used to working with IT departments," he says. "Until recently, Google's appliance has been the stepchild to their Web search and ad business."
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Australia's first 4G smartphone is the HTC Velocity 4G
-
Swedish e-commerce startup's execs linked to NYC sex crime
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
How to implement next-generation storage infrastructure for Big Data
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
Cost Effective Security and Compliance with Oracle Database 11g Release 2
Information ranging from trade secrets to financial data to privacy related information has become the target of sophisticated attacks from both sides of the firewall. Built upon 30 years of security experience, the Oracle database provides defense-in-depth security controls that enable organizations to transparently protect data. By leveraging these controls, organizations can safeguard data, ensure regulatory compliance, and achieve business goals such as consolidation, globalization, right sourcing and cloud computing while still maintaining scalability, performance and availability. Read this whitepaper. -
Oracle x86 Rack Servers Optimized for Rapid Deployments and Operational Efficiency
Business-critical and mission-critical workloads demanding applications and databases require stable and secure environments. When these types of workloads are deployed on x86 servers, the need to ensure business continuity, maximum uptime, and consistent processing means that IT managers and business unit managers are looking at enterprise x86 servers in a new way: They realize that the business depends on these servers and that x86 server platforms for the enterprise are no longer expendable, as they might have been when servers were dedicated to a single application or when they were deployed as small Web servers that could be easily taken offline and replaced. -
10 Essential Steps to Web Security
This short guide outlines 10 simple steps to best practice in web security. Follow them all to step up your organisation’s information security and stay ahead of your competitors. But remember that the target never stands still. Focus on the principles behind the steps – policy, vigilance, simplification, automation and transparency – to keep your information security bang up to date.
-
Photoshop Cs4
-
Photoshop Elements 4 Just the Steps for Dummies
-
Linux Source Code Multipack for Fedora 2 Bible and Wrox
-
Web Application Architecture - Principles, Protocols and Practices
-
Access 2002 for Dummies Quick Reference
-
Mac OS X Leopard Bible
-
Visio 2003 Bible
-
Jakarta Struts for Dummies
-
Web 2.0 for Business








Comments
Post new comment