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Google maps app invades the iPhone

Queena Kim Dec 13, 2012
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Google maps app invades the iPhone

Queena Kim Dec 13, 2012
HTML EMBED:
COPY

By now, you know about the war between Apple and Google. Earlier this year, Apple kicked Google Maps of its iPhone to make way for its own map, and, well, we all know how that went. It was a big iFail. And even Apple loyalists have been bemoaning the lack of a good map on their smartphones.

Well, today Google released the Google Maps as an app for iPhone. A truce? Not quite.

You’ve heard the old adage “location, location, location”? Well, in the age of mobile, you’ll be hearing a lot more of it, says Ronald Goodstein, a marketing professor at Georgetown’s Business School.

“The big growth in marketing right now is location based marketing on your mobile,” Goodstein said. “And Google earns about 97 percent of its revenues through advertising.”

Goodstein says with its Google’s new iPhone map, it has the potential to make more. After all, about half of the U.S.’s smartphone users are on iPhones and unlike the previous Google Maps, Google can carry advertising on its new version.

“It’s 12 o’clock and I’m on 95 south heading to Florida — well here’s the restaurant you might want to stop at,” Goodstein says.

Google Maps might also serve up ads for hotels and fruit stands. We’re not there yet, but analysts believe this scenario will unfold in the not-too-distant future. Google’s new app is scoring it another win and that’s in the court of public opinion.

“Apple makes great products but in terms of their software development they’re not the best in the space,” said Colin Gillis is an analyst at BGC Partners.

Gillis says Apple’s maps fiasco is reinforcing the emerging narrative that Google is the king of mobile software. And for the first time in recent memory, Georgetown’s Goodstein says, you are starting to see a slight crack in Apple loyalty.

“Loyal apple users want the Apple hardware but now they’re willing to compromise on the software,” Goodstein says. And if Apple has more failures, that crack could turn into a faultline.

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