In the final portion of a TechTrek class meeting in February, Jere Doyle gives his young charges a tech history lesson. First, he channels Socrates and draws knowledge and understanding out of the students by peppering them with questions.

鈥淕oogle,鈥 says Doyle. 鈥淲hat kind of company is it?鈥

鈥淎 data company,鈥 suggests one young woman.

鈥淲hy do you say that?鈥

鈥淓verything is based on data.鈥

鈥淭hat they make on their own?鈥

鈥淣辞.鈥

鈥淲here do they get it from?鈥

鈥淔rom people, users.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 an advertising company,鈥 says JB Bruggeman 鈥19, a business analytics and marketing student. (Atypically, TechTrek West will be a trip home for Bruggeman: he grew up in Silicon Valley.)

Doyle asks, 鈥淲hy do you say that?鈥

鈥淏ecause 90 percent of their revenues come from advertising.鈥

鈥淲hat鈥檚 their most successful product?鈥 Doyle asks the class.

鈥淭he search engine,鈥 a student answers.

鈥淪earch,鈥 Doyle agreed. 鈥淯nlike when I was here in the old days, and you had to go to Bapst Library to look something up.鈥

The class dwells on why, if Google has been so successful with its search engine and ad revenues, its parent company, Alphabet, has been pursuing 鈥渕oonshots,鈥 such as the hot-air balloon (intended to bring internet service to the Third World) and self-driving cars.

鈥淚鈥檝e been stuck behind self-driving test cars,鈥 says JB Bruggeman 鈥19, recalling incidents on the highways back home in California. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e sooo slow.鈥

鈥淚f you honk, do they speed up?鈥 Doyle wonders.

鈥淣辞.鈥

But for all the criticism or investor concern that Google lacks focus, Doyle goes on, 鈥渢hey nailed search [and] they nailed local [advertising]. Does anyone know who their big competitor was, back in 1999? The Yellow Pages. If you were a plumber, you would pay $3,000 for an ad in the phone book. Maybe it got you a call. Who knows? Google said, 鈥榃e鈥檒l only charge you if somebody calls.鈥欌

As a result of their laser focus on that model, made possible by their excellence in algorithms and analytics, Google remained standing amid the dot-com bust of the early 2000s. 鈥淚 think Google saved the internet,鈥 says Doyle.

Doyle鈥檚 co-instructor Gerald Kane weighs in on the company鈥檚 current moonshots. 鈥淲hat legacy companies run into is, they don鈥檛 know how to be innovative anymore. Once you鈥檙e a big company, it鈥檚 hard to manage 60,000 employees. It鈥檚 a bureaucracy. Google鈥檚 approach is to plant a thousand flowers,鈥 in the form of bets鈥攖hat is, research鈥攐n other products. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how to remain innovative. That鈥檚 the whole game.鈥

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