Skip navigation
Outgoing Google Cloud CEO Diane Greene Brian Ach/Getty Images for Wired
Outgoing Google Cloud CEO Diane Greene

Google to Create a Cloud App Marketplace, Chasing Amazon

Partners with MobileIron on platform that bundles services; the tool will increase Google G Suite’s application offerings

Nico Grant (Bloomberg) -- Alphabet Inc.’s Google is launching a digital store offering cloud-based software to companies and other organizations, its latest effort to catch cloud leaders like Amazon Web Services.

Google Cloud and MobileIron Inc., which offers a cybersecurity tool for cellphones, are partnering on a new online marketplace that will allow businesses to buy cloud services and distribute them to employees, while keeping corporate data secure. The platform which customers will be able to access through mobile telecom providers, may roll out in the second half of the year.

The new product will enhance Google’s G Suite, an online store for company and third-party applications, allowing customers to tap an even larger number of external services through the Google universe. MobileIron’s shares rose as much as 14 percent to $4.60 after the announcement, the biggest intraday gain since October.

Google is chasing Amazon.com Inc., the market leader in the cloud. AWS has operated a similar kind of software store since 2012. Google’s G Suite is also in an uphill battle for corporate software customers against long-time leader Microsoft Corp. While Google doesn’t disclose sales of business software, it said last summer that the unit has more than 3.5 million paying customers.

Companies often buy mobile cybersecurity tools through phone service providers such as AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc., as employees process an increasing amount of company data through smartphones.

Google’s new initiative with MobileIron doesn’t mark the first tool to bundle various cloud services -- AT&T offers a NetBond virtual private network to allow users to securely connect to cloud services and AppDirect’s marketplace lets companies buy various software solutions. But the new entrant will allow users to pay for many services together, as well as bringing Google’s scale and cachet to try to popularize the trend, according to Marcin Kurc, head of commerce platform at Google Cloud.

“Any type of simplification and working with market leaders helps us to grow the ecosystem,” Kurc said.

TAGS: Cloud
Hide comments

Comments

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <blockquote> <br> <p>

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Publish