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Senior VP at Google Diane Greene speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2016 in San Francisco Steve Jennings/Getty Images for TechCrunch)
Senior VP at Google Diane Greene speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2016 in San Francisco

Google Adds Cloud Customers, Nabbing Verizon From Microsoft

Alphabet aiming to boost the standing of Google’s business sales unit

(Bloomberg) -- Alphabet Inc. unveiled new customers and partners for its cloud storage service in an attempt to boost the standing of Google’s business sales unit, which lags behind Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp.

Diane Greene, Google’s cloud chief, named several recent clients at the company’s event Wednesday in San Francisco, including Colgate-Palmolive Co., HSBC Holdings Plc and EBay Inc. Google also scored a big win from a rival: Verizon Communications Inc. announced that it has moved more than 150,000 employees to Google’s productivity apps, called G Suite. Previously, Verizon used the Office app suite from Microsoft, according a person familiar with the arrangement.

“Cloud is just a transformational technology,” Greene said on stage. “It’s increasingly what is giving our customers their competitive advantage.”

Microsoft didn’t have an immediate comment on the Verizon contract.

See alsoGoogle Expands Cloud Partner Program

These new customers helped showcase Google’s efforts to garner more revenue from corporate clients, a transformation begun when Greene took on her role in late 2015. While the company doesn’t disclose cloud sales figures, it hinted at progress. Greene said Google wins half of the contracts when it competes directly for clients with Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft. However, several customers at the event said they also spend on cloud services with Google’s competitors.

Selling the Suite

Google’s largest focus at its event was on the search engine’s broad product portfolio and computing assets, including its security architecture and artificial intelligence -- a key strategy for its third-place cloud division.

Since Greene joined, Google’s pitch to potential customers is that it’s opening up the search giant’s enormous technical capabilities to others. Alphabet chairman Eric Schmidt capped off the keynote on Wednesday with this message: Alphabet has invested some $30 billion on its cloud services, although he didn’t specify the time frame of the spending.

“The company has both the money, the means and the commitment to pull off a new platform of computation for everyone that needs it,” he said on stage. “Please don’t attempt to duplicate this. You have better uses of your money.”

Last year, Google combined the sales teams of its cloud service, which sells companies storage space over the internet, and its apps. On Wednesday, Google executives also touted the company’s mapping software, mobile devices and machine intelligence tools.

Selling a package of products is Google’s attempt to lure customers from its larger cloud competitors. AWS is the market leader, netting more than $12 billion in revenue in 2016. Amazon and Microsoft are investing deeply in artificial intelligence.

“The talent that come into the company are going to expect a product like this,” Alin D’Silva, a Verizon vice president, said about the Google package.

Google generates close to 90 percent of sales from online advertising and doesn’t share its cloud revenue. But the item where the unit’s sales sit, Google’s “other revenues” line, rose 62 percent in the fourth quarter to $3.4 billion.

Greene said she learned Tuesday that Google cloud was recognized as having the “highest availability” of any cloud provider in 2016, meaning less chance for system crashing. Amazon acknowledged last week that a human error at AWS caused sweeping outages across the internet for several hours.

“I think 2017 will be a good year, too,” she said, laughing.

Intelligence Push

With its cloud push, Google is attempting to recruit external software partners to build out features. The company also announced a partnership with SAP SE’s Hana database to open up more programming tools for developers.

Additionally, Google introduced an expansion of its AI offerings -- software that lets companies process abundant video library content. Another Google Cloud customer, the insurance agency USAA, said it has deployed similar Google AI around image recognition to improve insurance rates and security fraud.

On the AI front, Google also announced the acquisition of Kaggle Inc., a startup that hosts machine learning competitions. The company didn’t disclose the price. Fei-Fei Li, a veteran AI researcher that Greene hired last year, said the team will be integrated with other AI assets Google has rolled out recently like its TensorFlow developer library.

“We at Google are making the tools available,” she said. “But it’s up to you to put them to use.”

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