You are currently viewing Google Marketing Strategy: How to Promote Multiple Product Lines with Powerful Marketing

Google Marketing Strategy: How to Promote Multiple Product Lines with Powerful Marketing

Google has long served marketers as a primary channel to distribute advertisements, and optimizing your site for the platformย is one of the only ways to ensure organic growth in the internet era. The company also owns a range of products for everything from entertainment to creative collaboration, and its search engine currently averages 5.4 billion searches per day.

This impressive size and success didnโ€™t come about by accident. Since its founding, Google has undertaken marketing strategies which lift up their products and utilize their immense collection of data to create powerful experiences for their customers.

How did Google reach this point through their product and marketing strategies? In this post we will explore what marketers can learn from the marketing strategies of this all-encompassing brand.

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Googleโ€™s History by Product Launches

Googleโ€™s founding is a relatively well known story. Cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded the company in 1998 with a $100,000 investment from Sun Microsystemsโ€™ Andy Bechtolsheim, which they used to rent a garage space and begin development on the Google search engine, named after the unimaginably large number 10^100 to represent the massive amount of information they wanted to share.

Sergey Brin and Larry Page in the original Google office โ€”ย their garage.

Sergey Brin and Larry Page pose in the garage that started it all. Source

Google set itself apart from other search engines in these early days by the way they formulated rankings and search results. While most search engines at the time based results on how often the designated keyword was shown, Google formulated results based on backlinks and relationships between websites, a strategy thought to result in better, more user-friendly results.

The company quickly grew, expanding from a garage to a sprawling campus in Mountainview, California (the Googleplex). Still, the company continued to capitalize on its understanding of its users and the new way to find information on the internet which they pioneered.

The Googleplex, Google's main office

The Googleplex (with accompanying Android mascot) Source

While Google originated as a search engine, the company has since launched a wide array of products.

Hereโ€™s a look at many of the key products Google has launched or acquired over the years:

Timeline of Google product launches and acquisitions

One thing that hasnโ€™t changed across all of these product launches is the fact that Google continues to build their products with a specific formula in mind.

How Does Google Decide to Build Products?

As a worldwide brand, Googleโ€™s product launches never fail to create waves and make people pay attention. But how do they decide which new products they should create?

Insights from User Data

With its wide array of products and massive user base, Google has a collection of user data unmatched by nearly any other company in the world. With this data they are able to gain valuable insights into what their users want and the best ways to create products that solve their problems.

When they see trends in their data, Google is able to capitalize by creating product lines that solve problems their customers are actually having.

Product-Led Growth Strategies

When a new Google product launches, the company prioritizes usage before they even consider monetization. This way they can work out how to create the best possible customer experience and grow a dedicated user base, ensuring the productโ€™s success from the start.

Essentially, they optimize for growth rather than revenue, and find immense success doing so.

Product Ecosystems

One recurring theme when looking at Googleโ€™s product offerings is their consistent use of dedicated ecosystems for collections of their products with similar use cases. A great example of this is Google Workspace:

Google Workspace applications

Source

This collection of apps integrates together, making it easy for users to create and manage their work across each individual app. Weโ€™ll dive into this concept in more detail later, but this makes it easy for word of mouth to spread as more people rely on Google products to manage their entire creative process.

How Does Google Market So Many Products So Effectively?

With all of these product lines in so many different niches, how does Google continue to successfully growย their user base?

Network Effects

One common feature among Googleโ€™s product lines, specifically those within Google Workspace, is that when one user starts using the product it increases the value for other users. This is because when people use the platforms to collaborate it necessitates those they work with use the same platforms, whose collaborators must also use the platforms, and so on.

How network effects work in a product environment

If someone is using Google Docsย it makes other people want to use Google Docs in order to be able to effectively collaborate on projects. Over time it becomes the primary collaboration app, as people want to work together on an app which everyone knows.

Brand Awareness

Google is one of the largest and most recognizable brands worldwide, and certainly in the U.S. This means that when they release a new product it gains great amounts of publicity and users immediately clamor to use it, a huge advantage for any product launch campaign.

Google product launch

Source

Add this excitement over new products to the authority and confidence which is given to a product when the Google name is attached to it, and you have a recipe for successful product launches time and time again.

A/B Testing

Finally, a reason Google can successfully launch so many products is that they are in a constant state of A/B testing their products. This is how they can have so many similar product lines at the same time, like how at one point in time there were four separate instant messaging platformsย on the Google network.

By constantly testing and optimizing their product lines without too much reliance on one product at a time, Google is able to build its portfolio while simultaneously paring back its offerings to the most successful product lines.

What Can Software Marketers Learn From These Strategies?

So, what youโ€™ve surely been thinking this whole time: what can I learn from Googleโ€™s marketing strategies that will make me a better marketer? Most people canโ€™t claim they have the brand recognition which Google enjoys, but there are a few key takeaways from the strategies that have made Google such a success you can apply to any level of business.

Use Data to Determine Customersโ€™ Problems, Then Solve Them

Even if you donโ€™t have the massive databases Google employs to find insights, your marketing strategies should always be built around the newest, best data you can gatherย on your target audience.

This advice is twofold for your new product lines as well. A main factor contributing to Googleโ€™s sustained success employing new product linesย is that they are all built around solving specific problems they have identified by carefully analyzing consumer data.

What does that mean for you? Go talk to your customers. Determine what problems they may still be having despite your service, and find new ways to solve them.

If you follow the data, the results will come.

Product-Led Growth (PLG) Strategies

Another lesson to draw from Googleโ€™s marketing strategy is that businesses can benefit from a focus on growth over revenue. This means you should create your product, share it, grow your audience โ€” then consider how to make a profit.

This may seem counterintuitive โ€” businesses are supposed to make money โ€” but the main idea here is that your customer base can grow far more from a free product at the start of its life cycle than it ever will from a paid product. The main idea is that you should focus on getting a lot of users, and then learn how to monetize your user base.

Consider offering a โ€˜freemiumโ€™ย version of your product. This version would offer some of the features customers love, but withhold just enough to incentivise upgrading for satisfied customers, many of whom may not have even tried your product were it not free.

This is the best way to make your product market itself โ€” and it can bring you major success.

Build Products That Work Together

Finally, Google has found massive success with a variety of product lines because it builds products that work seamlessly together, allowing ease of collaboration and incentivising people to use their entire product line once they use one app.

CoSchedule does this with our Marketing Suiteย and Headline Studioย integration. By making it easy for users of one product to integrate their work with our other products, users of one product are more likely to use the other.

Look at ways you can make your different product lines work more seamlessly with one another โ€” your loyal customers will be thankful.

Googleโ€™s Continued Success

The future of Google seems to be in good hands. The brand is bigger than ever, and is making leaps in computer software and hardware at the same time that their physical devices โ€” like the Chromebook โ€” are taking off in the education and work-dedicated devices space. Not to mention the massive collection of product linesย the brand boasts.

By continuing to invest in the future of technology, Google is set up for success in the future. Their wide variety of product lines, many of which people rely on on a day-to-day basis, ensures that they will continue to grow going forward.

All the while, Google Search is still the biggest search engine in the world.

Talk about not putting all your eggs into one basket.

The post Google Marketing Strategy: How to Promote Multiple Product Lines with Powerful Marketing appeared first on CoSchedule Blog.