Everyone wants a “Google killer”

by Mathew on February 9, 2007 · Comments

Human beings are funny. If you’re the underdog, the plucky startup going head-to-head with a big player, people will root for you regardless of whether you have a hope in hell of actually succeeding — but as soon as you become the dominant player, they will dump you in a heartbeat and start rooting for the next underdog. Google knows this better than anyone. Not that long ago they were the one getting all the cheers, and now we are all looking at companies like Powerset as the next potential “Google killer.”

mind reading.jpgFor a company that doesn’t even have a real product yet, Powerset continues to get a surprising amount of publicity, including the story in the New York Times and a long feature at VentureBeat about the company’s licensing of natural-language search technology from Xerox’s legendary PARC research centre. Mike Arrington goes so far as to call Matt Marshall of VentureBeat a “cheerleader” for the company, which got $12.5-million in venture financing last year (contingent on the licensing of Xerox’s technology, according to Matt). He also points to a long treatise on natural language search that Danny Sullivan wrote here, which is worth reading.

Is Powerset the next big thing in search? Perhaps. But right now, it seems like a straw man dressed up in hopes and dreams, sent in to battle the now seemingly invincible Google. My friend Paul Kedrosky seems similarly skeptical of Powerset’s chances.

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  • Good comments Mathew.
    It's too bad that companies don't follow the almost common sensical business advise: under promise and over deliver. And especially on the internet, when competition is just a click away, there is no need to make grandiose statements. Most net users, especially the younger generation, are smart enough to figure out what is good and what is not.

    My belief is that on the internet, if you really have a solid product, you will succeed irrespective of the formal effort you put in publicising your product. It might take a little time, but hey, patience is a virture :)

    While all this hype may get them some initial audience, the proof will be in the real product. And starting with such hype may turn off some of potential early adopters of the product.

    But all this is immaterial if they do have a solid product.
  • Mathew
    Thanks for the comment, Anuvinder. I would agree. And it may be that Powerset doesn't really want all this publicity -- but I kind of doubt that :-)
  • I would immediately switch to whatever search engine is powered by the guy in the photo.

    Without even stopping for a second to think about it.
  • Mathew
    Me too, Engtech -- that guy is clearly a genius :-)
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