Google might acquire HubSpot. Here’s why Microsoft should worry

Google parent Alphabet’s potential acquisition of HubSpot, a U.S. marketing software maker with a market value of $31 billion, would boost its ability to compete against Microsoft in offering cloud-based applications to companies.

Reuters reported last month that Google was exploring an offer for HubSpot. Such a deal would be Google’s biggest, expanding its products and applications that serve businesses, analysts and investment bankers said in interviews.

Google is already challenging the dominance of Microsoft’s Office platform through its Google Workspace collaboration offerings. Buying HubSpot would make Google a competitor in the so-called customer relationship management sector, which Microsoft caters to with its Dynamics 365 products, said Cowen analyst Derrick Wood.

“It does appear that Google has aspirations to try to take market share from Microsoft in the productivity suite, and they can use HubSpot to bundle applications together for clients,” Wood said.

Representatives for Google, HubSpot and Microsoft did not respond to requests for comment.

HubSpot, which makes marketing software for small and medium-sized businesses, is seeking ways to maintain sales growth in the face of a wider economic slowdown.

HubSpot CEO Yamini Rangan said on the company’s first-quarter earnings call this month that client demand had weakened, as small businesses fret about the economic impact of high interest rates.

HubSpot has maintained growth despite clients downsizing, reporting a 23% rise in sales and 15% operating margin in the first quarter. However, equity analysts have warned that its shares would have taken a hit were it not for Google’s acquisition interest.

Most analysts covering HubSpot lowered their price target on the stock following its latest earnings report. Some have warned that the company’s niche in serving smaller businesses, which sets it apart from bigger enterprise competitors such as Salesforce and Oracle, could become a weakness if a downturn makes financing harder to secure for those clients.

“Tighter lending standards could have an outsized negative impact on access to funding for small and medium-sized businesses (that are HubSpot’s clients),” Goldman Sachs analysts wrote in a note on May 9.

HubSpot specializes in so-called “inbound marketing,” in which the consumer initiates engagement with a brand. HubSpot clients use its software to produce advertising content that consumers click on online or follow up on.

Inbound marketing largely relies on search engines and social media to attract customers and convert them into leads, offering many synergies with Google, whose parent Alphabet also owns popular video streaming service YouTube.

While Microsoft has focused on attracting big corporate customers, Google has sought to also appeal to smaller companies, which make up the bulk of HubSpot’s client base.

Acquiring HubSpot would deliver Google a trove of valuable sales leads, filling a gap as it removes tracking applications known as “cookies” from its Chrome browser in the second half of 2024, said Stifel analyst Parker Lane.

“Purging third-party cookies from Chrome … places a greater emphasis on first-party data, which HubSpot bring an abundance of to the table,” Lane said.

AI in advertising

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai and other executives have said that Google views advertising as a key route to making money off its advances in artificial intelligence.

“AI innovation across our ads ecosystem is core to every aspect of our product portfolio, from targeting, bidding, creative, measurement, and across campaign types,” Google’s Chief Business Officer Philipp Schindler said during the company’s first-quarter earnings call last month.

Google clinching a deal for HubSpot would risk a challenge from antitrust regulators, even as many experts agree the tie-up would not curb competition given the lack of business overlap in the two companies. This is because of regulators’ growing aversion to technology giants getting bigger through acquisitions.

MorningStar analyst Dan Romanoff said Google could decide the potential deal’s benefits outweigh the possibility of a regulatory challenge.

“Amazon is the clear leader in the cloud, Microsoft is No. 2 and Google is kind of distant third. One can imagine Google saying, ‘If we buy HubSpot, that’d be like having Microsoft Dynamics 365, so it’ll make us more competitive there,'” Romanoff said.

—Milana Vinn, Reuters

https://www.fastcompany.com/91130369/google-hubspot-acquisition-microsoft-customer-relationships-marketing-advertising-competition?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creată 1y | 23 mai 2024, 21:20:04


Autentifică-te pentru a adăuga comentarii

Alte posturi din acest grup

Jack Dorsey’s new Sun Day app tells you exactly how long to tan before you burn

Twitter cofounder Jack Dorsey is back with a new app that tracks sun exposure and vitamin D levels.

Sun Day uses location-based data to show the current UV index, the day’s high, and add

15 iul. 2025, 21:10:06 | Fast company - tech
The CEO of Ciena on how AI is fueling a global subsea cable boom

Under the ocean’s surface lies the true backbone of the internet: an estimated

15 iul. 2025, 18:50:04 | Fast company - tech
AI therapy chatbots are unsafe and stigmatizing, a new Stanford study finds

AI chatbot therapists have made plenty of headlines in recent months—s

15 iul. 2025, 18:50:03 | Fast company - tech
Elon Musk’s chatbot Grok searches for his views before answering questions

The latest version of Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence chatbot Grok is echoing the views of its

15 iul. 2025, 16:30:06 | Fast company - tech
How this Florida county is using new 911 technology to save lives

When an emergency happens in Collier County, Florida, the

15 iul. 2025, 16:30:05 | Fast company - tech
How a ‘Shark Tank’-winning neuroscientist invented the bionic hand that stole the show at Comic-Con

A gleaming Belle from Beauty and the Beast glided along the exhibition floor at last year’s San Diego Comic-Con adorned in a yellow corseted gown with cascading satin folds. She could bare

15 iul. 2025, 14:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Why 1995 was the year the internet grew up

The internet wasn’t born whole—it came together from parts. Most know of ARPANET, the internet’s most famous precursor, but it was always limited strictly to government use. It was NSFNET that bro

15 iul. 2025, 11:50:03 | Fast company - tech