Google+ — The Social Network Google Built for Google

In 2011, Google launched Google+ with genuine conviction — and the full weight of its engineering muscle behind it. By 2019 it was gone. This episode walks through what Google expected, what the data kept showing them, why the org chart overrode the users, and which lessons actually stuck.

Google+ — The Social Network Google Built for Google
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In the summer of 2011, Google launched a social network with more engineering muscle and more corporate urgency behind it than almost any product in tech history. They had real reasons to be worried — Facebook was becoming the social layer of the web, accumulating a social graph that Google had no equivalent of. Google+ was the answer to that threat. It signed up 25 million users in its first month. It earned breathless coverage from every tech outlet. For a few weeks, it looked like Google might have actually done it.
It hadn't. What followed was eight years of ghost-town engagement numbers, forced integrations that alienated users across YouTube and Gmail, and a deepening gap between the reported metrics and what was actually happening. By April 2019, Google+ was gone. This episode walks through what Google expected, what the signals were telling them almost from day one, why the org-chart-as-product-strategy approach backfired so badly, and — crucially — which lessons from that failure actually found their way into how Google and the broader industry operates today.

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