Google Down Year to Year?

Now that's what I call a bear market. Analyst Trip Chowdhry claims Google will shrink in annual revenues and profits, slash 10-15% of its workforce, and in the comments on Eric's post (which I link to above), one guy says Google is cutting its holiday Christmas party in the…

Disney-Chicken-Little-Sky-Falling-1

Now that’s what I call a bear market.

Analyst Trip Chowdhry claims Google will shrink in annual revenues and profits, slash 10-15% of its workforce, and in the comments on Eric’s post (which I link to above), one guy says Google is cutting its holiday Christmas party in the UK!

None of this sounds reasonable to me. The web will keep growing through this recession. So will Google. Not as fast, of course, but…this feels like the same kind of speculation that inflated the first dot com bubble – only inverted.

11 thoughts on “Google Down Year to Year?”

  1. The expectation of continuous year-over-year growth is NOT sustainable.
    After an initial climb it’s fine to cruise until a new S curve tales over.
    We must change our expectations if we’re serious about sustainability.

  2. Traffic estimates from both Quantcast and Compete show that Google continues to lose visitor share throughout this year.

    The prediction of decreased revenue may seem drastic, but it IS supported by a number of indicators, including an industry-wide reduced spend on search advertising.

  3. I agree with Nabil’s comment on Dec 2nd. Year over year growth in profits is not sustainable; it is harmful and ruinous; it is only achievable by monoploistic means or by using layoffs as a means of managing earnings in down times like today. Why does there have to be uber constant growth? Because the public shareholders demand it. What is the goal of the enterprise? “maximize shareholder wealth”. Until this changes it will always be about quantity, not quality– (See also Microsoft and Oracle).

  4. Eh, Google can not afford a Christmas party with $11B of liquid assests.

    This year’s Christmas seems to be pretty expensive and out of reach for many. Let’s just cancel it and try again next year, shall we?

  5. I don’t think Google will shrink in annual revenue(ofcourse barring this recession period), what we are forgetting here is that the most basic operation that we daily do is ‘Search’, be it anything, we need information and as long as this ‘need’ is there Google’s dominance will remain.

Leave a Reply to Tomi Itkonen Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *