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In six years, two students turned a simple idea into a global phenomenon. Now competitors are searching for a way to dethrone the latest princes of the Net.
Short of "you're under arrest" there are very few things that the leaders of a young technology company would like less to hear than "Bill Gates thinks you've kicked his butt and now he wants your business." But Sergey Brin and Larry Page don't seem ruffled at all. Hanging out one day in their spacious new headquarters, the two young cofounders of Google are calm, even confident, in the face of a rising tide of competitors, technology challenges and the tricky process of using the principles of disorganization to build a substantial company out of one unquestionably brilliant idea.Let's face it—it's good to be Google. Every minute, worldwide, in 90 languages, the index of this Internet-based search engine created by these Stanford doctoral dropouts is probed more than 138,000 times. In the course of a day, that's over 200 million searches of 6 billion Web pages, images and discussion-group postings. Searches for golf clubs, song lyrics, tomorrow night's blind date, recipes and the unaltered screen shots of Janet Jackson's Super Bowl boo-boo. Amazingly, the majority of those queries evoke satisfactory, even revelatory, results. Google has changed the way the world finds things out, and enticed it to look for things previously considered unfindable.
Not only has Google very famously become a verb, but Silicon Valley is holding its collective breath for the seemingly inevitable IPO, when Google will become a synonym for another word: wealthy. Still, even without a market cap, the two Google guys recently made the Forbes billionaire list.
Here they are, outlining their plans for getting all the world's information on their thousands of servers and delivering it to anyone who can peck a query into a search field. Brin, 30, the ruminative Russian-born son of a math professor who is Google's business visionary, won't sit down: he's bothered by a mild injury incurred by his hobby of gymnastics. As Brin stretches, 31-year-old Page, the guardian of Google's secret-sauce search techniques, tells a story.
"I was researching big computer networks the other day, networks," he says. "I put this really strange query into Google, and got this research paper with the exact things I wanted. Which would have been a many-hour process normally. It took all of 30 seconds. I gave it to a bunch of people in the company, and now we have this project. It's very likely that I wouldn't have done that at all if it had been more difficult. I think the value of that can be very large, making the world more efficient."
Exactly. Google has made such eureka moments as common as sneezing. Who hasn't had such a revelation on Google, whether the discovery was an old girlfriend's whereabouts or a cutting-edge treatment for a rare disease? Amazing to consider that less than a decade ago, search was a backwater, deemed not very interesting and certainly not very profitable. Instead, Internet companies put their energy into developing feature-laden "portals." Then came Larry and Sergey, and search became the center of the Internet universe. "Search is the ultimate killer online app," says Bob Davis, former CEO of Lycos. "The Internet without search is like a cruise missile without a guidance system."
The rest of the industry has noticed. Boy, has it noticed. To quote the numbers, Safa Rashtchy at Piper Jaffray reports that annual search revenues are just under $4 billion today (about a billion of that is Google's) and will almost triple over the next four years. But those figures don't reflect search's real impact; those empty query fields on search pages are the front doors to the Internet. If you're not indexed by Google, you pretty much don't exist. And if you're a business with a high page rank—a key metric that determines whether your site will be displayed high in the results for a given query, or buried a few hundred mouseclicks back—you can count on a thriving online trade. A horde of new companies has arisen whose services focus on performing all the tweaks and playing all the tricks that supposedly get your Web site listed higher on Google's results pages. (Google constantly fine-tunes its system to frustrate such manipulating.) If you can't afford to hire one of those firms, buy the latest offering in a famous series: "Search Engine Optimization for Dummies."
So it's no surprise that all the companies that missed out the first time around are now gearing up for the Search Wars, a clash that will be waged with algorithms, measured by terabytes and scored by click-throughs. Gunning for Google are Internet giants, clever new start-ups and an 800-pound gorilla in Redmond, Wash. They might not have gotten it at first, but now it seems terribly obvious. "Search has always been essential to people's lives," says Jeff Weiner of Yahoo. "We're all trying to seek happiness—a new car, a job, a spouse... it's how we live."
What does Brin think of the gathering forces? He... stretches. "I've seen companies obsessed with competition, say, with Microsoft, that keep looking in their rearview mirror and crash into a tree head-on because they're so distracted," he says. "If I had one magic bullet, I wouldn't spend it on a competitor. I'd spend it to make sure we're executing as well as we possibly can. I think we're doing a pretty good job."
The folks at Yahoo can't disagree. Just over a year ago those at the archetypical Internet portal realized that while the world was bowing before the altar of search, their company had little more than an overtaxed Web directory and two pieces of paper licensing other people's search technology (including you know whose). People didn't Yahoo anybody—they Googled. And for the folks at Yahoo, that could not stand.
It cost more than a billion dollars—most of it buying technology—but Yahoo is now making its bid to be a Google buster. Earlier this year it unveiled a rebuilt engine, which spits out results comparable to the other guy's. The long-term strategy is to tap the treasure house of information that lives elsewhere on the busy Yahoo portal. So your search might draw from Yahoo's traffic reports, shopping services, maps, financial data and hot Britney gossip. "Search results are not enough," says Weiner. "We're going to add another layer." (Last week, Google fired back by announcing an e-mail service, called Gmail, that offers more free memory than Yahoo's.)
Part of Yahoo's new technology portfolio is Overture, a company that pioneered an advertising practice that certain search purists regard as blasphemy: mingling "paid inclusions" with the results normally delivered in response to a search query. "We never claimed it was a better approach for doing research on 18th-century Spain," says Ted Meisel, who came to Yahoo as head of Overture. "But if you're trying to buy a power washer for your back deck, it's a pretty good way to find what you need." Now Yahoo has begun a Content Acquisition Program (CAP) that establishes a controversial relationship between its search business and companies that want to appear in the results pages. In exchange for a fee, companies can provide feeds of its pages to Yahoo's search index. Weiner says that such pages won't get unfair consideration, but critics are questioning whether the practice affects the integrity of the results. (Google's ads appear alongside its "pure" search results, and are marked as such.) Meanwhile, Google has innovated with a program it calls AdSense, which places ads on Web sites that don't belong to Google—other businesses, nonprofit or academic institutions and even blogs.
Brewster Kahle, founder of the nonprofit Internet Archive, is hoping that at least some of the search world remains beyond the forces of Mammon. After all, when 71 percent of American middle- and high-school students use the Internet as their No. 1 research venue, isn't it a bit disturbing that homework is becoming a sponsored activity? Kahle is encouraging an alternative. He provides the infrastructure for would-be search wizards to create their own "open source" (noncommercial) engines. "I'd like to see a Google a month," he says.
Competitors are popping out of the woodwork and even coming back from the dead. One rival is a rejuvenated Ask Jeeves, a onetime dot-com bubble casualty. In 2001 it acquired the technology and the engineering team behind the highly regarded search technology of Teoma.
Of course, Google's biggest problem may well be (cue soundtrack from "Jaws") Microsoft. Bill Gates is constitutionally unable to countenance the idea that a cheeky Silicon Valley start-up can claim even the mildest role as an Internet gateway. Last autumn Gates told NEWSWEEK that his company's complacency in search was a grave error that would soon be corrected. "We didn't make it as much of a priority as we should have," he said. "We recognized that, and we're on the job." At the World Economic Forum earlier this year, he was even more frank: "[Google] kicked our butts," he said. The last time Microsoft felt similarly embarrassed—when it failed to notice that the Internet was kind of going to be a big thing—Gates started a companywide jihad that didn't stop until his competitor, Netscape, was eviscerated.
This time, Googlers claim that it's the Softies who are out of their league. Anna Patterson, a Stanford search wizard recruited by both companies (she chose the Googleplex), had the chance to evaluate Microsoft's talent. Not impressed. "It's a bunch of people at the first grade," she says. "Eight junior programmers who don't know anything about search."
Microsoft's answer: just wait. "I'm more than glad to have people underestimate what we can do," says the VP in charge of Microsoft's search effort, Yusuf Mehdi. "You can't remotely discount the level of technical talent we have devoted to this."
Though Microsoft hasn't announced the details of its search strategy, an outline is taking shape. The first step involves transforming the lackluster search engine it currently uses in MSN. "We're taking our time to architect a next-generation system that answers people's questions, an end-to-end system that will leapfrog what's out there today," says Mehdi. Subsequent stages involve tapping into the company's unique advantages—the software used by hundreds of millions of people to run their computers and create their documents. To Microsoft, search will involve everything on your own machine and other databases to which you have access. Gates has recently been demoing a program called Stuff I've Seen, which uses "memory landmarks" to search through e-mails, photographs and documents.
The next step might well be called "Stuff I Should See." It involves another process cooked up by its think-tank people called Implicit Query. "Too often, searching means stopping what you're doing, open a browser and type in a query," says researcher Eric Horvitz. His alternative is software that figures out what you might want to ask for, depending on what you're doing. Only Microsoft, which provides most people's mail software, word processing and desktop, is positioned to launch such an approach. And the radically revamped file-handling system planned for the next version of Windows, codenamed Longhorn, is well suited to handle complicated searches. In short, Microsoft wants to offer a richer version of search than Google can deliver—even before you type a query into a search field.
Google's CEO and chairman Eric Schmidt—brought in by Brin and Page as the designated adult to run the company—doesn't think Google will suffer the same fate as Netscape. "This search stuff is very hard to do, and it's really very hard to do at the kind of scale that Google does it at. People will have multiple choices, and our goal is to get as many of those choices as possible to be Google."
The winners will be the ones who innovate best, because the major breakthroughs in the field are yet to come. "Search is not a solved problem," says Udi Manber, CEO of A9, a new search company formed by Amazon.com that will focus on e-commerce. "Ten years from now, what we're doing now will look pretty primitive."
Sergey Brin agrees. "I think we're pretty far along compared to 10 years ago," he says. "At the same time, where can you go? Certainly if you had all the world's information directly attached to your brain, or an artificial brain that was smarter than your brain, you'd be better off. Between that and today, there's plenty of space to cover."
Indeed, over the next few years search will evolve in a number of key areas, and Google faces big competition in all of them.
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