Google Places is a local business ad vehicle for the Web. Facebook Places plays to the social side of the coin. Both will come into great competition over time, analysts say.
Facebook Places, Google Places Vie for Local Ad Spend (
Page 1 of 2 )
The Facebook Places check-in service should pose a strong challenge to
Google Places once local businesses begin advertising through it, experts
believe.
The services ultimately share the same means to a financial end in making ad
dollars from connecting local businesses to consumers using their smartphones
to navigate city streets.
Google Places is a local business owner's advertising vehicle
for the Web. Facebook Places plays to the social side of the coin to
help people share information about each other, but it has great ad potential.
Formally named the Google Local
Business Center,
Google Places lets restaurants, tanning salons and other service providers list
information about their establishments on Google Maps.
When users do a search for a local Starbucks, they can click on its Place
Page and see store details, as well as ratings and reviews of that specific
venue. Businesses may even choose to provide a small yellow call-out in their listing for $25 per
month through a program Google calls Tags.
But Google Places has no true social element to call its own.
Google has fashioned its Google Latitude friend-finding service and Google
Buzz for mobile to leverage Google Maps, but there is no glue between these
products, no network of people to entice other users to connect and share
information.
Facebook Places, meanwhile, is a location-based platform that lets users
check in from a restaurant, bar or some other local joint and tag their friends
so that other friends can know what they're up to and possibly meet up.
Facebook's service is available in the United
States only for now, covering 125 million
people, but in time Places will serve the network's 500 million global users.
Where Google Places is about information and advertising first, Facebook
Places plays up the idea of connecting friends with a strong plan for local
advertising lurking in the background.
At launch, the company didn't play up the advertising component. Indeed,
Facebook told reporters it didn't
it didn't have specific plans in mind to make
money from Places.