Khaleej Times

Google catches on

- Saritha Rai

After missing the last wave of social in India, Google is trying to use its platform to become a one-stop shop for search, social networking and payments. The India push is part of Google’s aggressive global expansion plans.

bangalore — A Mumbai train commuter who witnessed an accident earlier this month, turned to his smartphone to ask neighbors how to help a bleeding victim. Responses poured in instantane­ously. Take him to the station master at the next stop; ask the ticket collector for first aid; call 138 for emergency help and so on. Not long after, the commuter posted a happy ending: the injured party had received medical attention.

This transpired within minutes on Neighbourl­y, the hyper-local social network unveiled in India this month by Google’s Next Billion Users program. The neighborho­od network — available in Mumbai and soon to expand to other cities — lets people share local expertise and crucial informatio­n with others in the vicinity.

The crowd-sourced recommenda­tions range widely: kitchen cabinet makers, service stations that repair electric scooters, cricket ticket sellers, gardening supplies stores and much more.

With almost a half billion Indians now using smartphone­s, Google sees an opportunit­y to become a one-stop shop for search, social networking and payments.

“After missing the last wave of social, Google is trying to use its platform to become a significan­t player in these areas,” says New Delhi-based Forrester Research forecast analyst, Satish Meena.

Google has long aspired to be the go-to platform in India, where rivals Facebook and its WhatsApp messaging service have already amassed a huge user base and Amazon is spending billions on e-commerce. Google wants to bring hundreds of millions of Indians online and build products that appeal to a diverse population, no matter the social strata, language spoken or type of device used.

In 2016, the company began offering free Wi-Fi in the country’s largest train stations and has since expanded to 400 locations. Last year the Mountain View, California-based search giant introduced a payment service called Google Tez. The voice-powered Google Assistant is already available in eight Indian languages. In an era of fake news, trolling and privacy concerns, the Neighbourl­y app, two years in the making, could help Google take on Facebook and WhatsApp.

Caesar Sengupta, who runs the Next Billion Users initiative, said at the app’s unveiling that it would help people get precise informatio­n without participat­ing in group chats that “keep getting bigger and noisier,” such as WhatsApp’s tendency to fill up with “good morning” messages.

Neighbourl­y users can browse, ask and answer questions without sharing personal informatio­n. The app only shows a first names while keeping the phone number, full name and other informatio­n private. A user’s profile photo cannot

After missing the last wave of social, Google is trying to use its platform to become a significan­t player in these areas Satish Meena, Analyst, Forrester Research

be enlarged or stored, unlike in other apps. Upon signing up, everyone pledges to keep the community safe and refrain from posting inappropri­ate or spam messages.

The India push is part of Google’s aggressive global expansion. The company recently invested $550 million in Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com Inc. and a smaller amount in India’s Fynd, giving it an online shopping toehold in the world’s most populous nations. Now it’s fine-tuning social and messaging, where it has had limited success with Google+, Hangouts and Allo.

“General social networking is dominated by Facebook and peerto-peer messaging by WhatsApp,” says Brandon Verblow, a New Yorkbased analyst at Forrester Research. “However opportunit­ies for local networking have not yet been fully exploited.”

Google India already generates about $1 billion in ad revenue, and the app opens a new avenue to potentiall­y sell high-priced targeted local ads while collecting more informatio­n about users which can be used to sell ads across other products. “If Google can scale Neighbourl­y, it could become a large revenue generator,” Verblow says.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Google wants to bring hundreds of millions of Indians online and build products that appeal to a diverse population, no matter the social strata, language spoken or type of device used. —
Bloomberg Google wants to bring hundreds of millions of Indians online and build products that appeal to a diverse population, no matter the social strata, language spoken or type of device used. —

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