Google Gets 20% Cut of Google Apps Marketplace
"We love this growth, but as [the cloud] grows, we're hearing from
customers: 'We like what you're doing, but what about the rest of my business?
I'm starting to see other vendors who are offering me other cloud solutions,
but if I try to picture deploying expense reporting and human resources and meeting
management, I start to worry about how I'm going to get a handle on this. How
am I going to manage running my entire business in the cloud?'" Glazer
told eWEEK in a briefing before the Campfire One event.
The Google Apps Marketplace will also challenge Salesforce.com, which has spent the last
decade-plus fomenting its Force.com and AppExchange platforms. Force.com lets
external developers create add-ons that integrate into the main Salesforce
application and are hosted on Salesforce.com's cloud computing
infrastructure.
AppExchange is a directory of applications built for
Salesforce by third-party developers, which users can purchase and add to their
Salesforce.com system. In fact, Salesforce.com AppExchange and Google Apps
Marketplace share some of the same partners, such as Appirio.
Other participants in the Google Apps Marketplace include Intuit, whose
Intuit Online Payroll is a small business application that lets business owners
run payroll, pay taxes and let employees check pay stubs. JIRA Studio a hosted
software development suite from Atlassian Software that lets developers move
between Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Docs, and other design and development
tools to manage projects.
Once installed to a company's domain, third-party apps work like native
Google applications. The Marketplace leverages OpenID to let users log on via
single sign-on and open the apps from within Google Apps. Administrators may
grant users the ability to let apps in the Marketplace integrate with Google
Calendar, Gmail, Google Docs and other Google Apps data.
The Google Apps Marketplace also handles any software updates made to
third-party apps, so users have one less detail with which to concerns
themselves.
Google Apps Marketplace Product Manager Chris Vander Mey told eWEEK that
after charging a $100 admission fee to enter the market, Google will take a 20
percent cut of application sales, recurring on subscriptions. This covers the
purchase and install process, as well as integration features exclusive to
installable apps.
Until this service is available, developers must bill on their own schedule
and terms via billing APIs. Google will offer to handle billing via Google
Checkout, with developers setting prices and duration, later in 2010.








