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This Google metrics interview question is: How would you measure the success of Google Photos?
Describe the product
Google photo is a web and mobile app that allows you to load, store, edit, share photos video and gifs I’ll call this Media. You can create albums (collections of media) that you can share, cast, and you can order items such as prints. Google photo has an app and desktop uploader that moves photos from your phone or computer into google photo. Google photo provides cool AI and does face recognition and builds composite photos for you both animated and collage. Google photo has already reached over a billion users. Google photo doesn’t have a clear revenue monetization model as storage is free if you use their high quality setting and ordering hard copy photos, books and mugs isn’t something that happens every day.
Clarifying questions
In a real interview: I would ask what are the goals of Google photo
Goal
Acquisition - Given existing user of over 1 billion users acquisition isn’t likely the goal
Revenue - discussed above isn’t the likely goal
Retention and engagement – closely linked – engaged users are retained user. Are users using the service not just uploading and forgetting they are there (all those photos I have up on one drive).
Market Share – against what – Facebook and Instagram are social sharing platform – google photos is a storage and manipulation platform that if done right is a gateway for social sharing. Other services like Microsoft photo I don't believe have a market share like google.
Customer satisfaction – while really important – we can likely get a glimpse of customer satifaction through engagement and retention
I believe the main goal is to have users engauge and with google photo's!
User Journey – skipping acquisition
User take a photo
User uploads a photo (hopefully automatically)
User opens app or web
User looks at photos
User edits photos
Users shares photos
Step | Metric | Importance |
Take a photo | Off – App – We likely don’t have visibility | low |
User uploads a photo | Number of photos uploaded per day
Users that upload a photo (D/W/M)
Avg photos per user
| This is a raw number and should upward trends as user base grows and number of photos increases.
This tied to the above metric should be on a constant upward trend (more of a health metric than success)
Show photo taking trends assuming photos are auto uploaded. |
User opens app or web | D/W/M active
Time spent (avg)
Time spent (user banded high medium low)
| This is a prime number of how many users use the app/ web
An important metric that users are not just logging in but spending time – we will likely get better indicates of usage
Same as above |
User looks at photos
| Number of photos looked at
Avg Photos looked at
Users in bands high medium low | This is a prime activity – users can look at photos |
User edits photos (includes tagging and organizing )
| Number of edits
Types of edits
| Shows both usage, but decreases may show that they are editing the photos in other apps and we may be missing functionality |
Shares a photo | Number of shares
Users that share
Methods of share
Which sites they share with.
| We take photos not only to keep the memory but to share the memory – this is the main driver behind Facebook, Instagram, etc. |
|
|
|
Measuring success.
1. D/W/M Active users – open the app – this is the top of engagement funnel and shows health (downward changes show issues with retention)
2. Users in bands H/M/L number of photos looked at (trended over time) – this is next step in the funnel of the users that open - are they looking at high medium or low number of photos – shows health
3. Edits and organizes photos - % of users that edit a photo – shows engagement
4. Users that share a photo at a high level doesn’t matter what method (Facebook, Instagram, text, email, etc., casted to a google device.) % of users that share – they have reached the bottom of the funnel – shows success. I think this is the metric that most shows sucess of photos they open enguaged and reached the main function of taking photos turning them into shareable memories. I waould want to see this trended over time and have the ability to break it our by user segment.
To measure the success of Google Photos, I'd first take a step back and remember the goals for Google Photos along with use cases:
User Goals: Easily aggregate photos in a way that is searchable, scalable, and shareable.
Business Goals: Allow users to try out a product they love that can eventually buy a paid service. Further empower the Google ecosystem so they get benefits from other services as well.
Use Cases:
- Store photos on the cloud automatically
- Share photos
- Search photos
- Edit photos
- Order collages from photos
Metrics for success:
- Revenue coming in
- Photos storage
- Ordering photos
- Overall App/Website Engagement - DAU/WAU/MAU
- New users coming
- Churned users
- New gmail users / maps users from Google Photos (not sure about this one, but if you need a gmail account to use photos, how many new gmail users did we add? Also, can we measure how many people now trust GMaps because the location search in GPhotos is so accurate for example?)
- % of G Photos users that are also active on G Maps
- % of G Photos users that are also active on GMail
- Specific feature success:
- # Searches
- How often/ retention?
- # Shared albums/ shared photos
- How often/ retention?
- Upgrading / downgrading photo storage
- # photos ordered
- Price/photo
- Retention
- # Searches
How would you measure the success of google photos?
Why does google photos exist? it helps you store, organise and share your photos in the following ways:
- Backup Storage for all your pics/videos: you don't need to keep blocking your phone's storage, it helps you store them on cloud where you can access them via the app or google photos site
- Organise your photos: Google organises your photos into album/theme, you can refer to them by location or organise them into albums
- Search: you can search photos
- Share photos: It makes photo sharing super easy - you can share an album and other people can view
- Collaborate: other people can add photos from their phones to the album
- Data storage managemne: you can actually free up space by deleting backed up photos/duplicate photos
- User installs google photos(iOS)/sign up on it(android devices have it pre-installed)
- User configures it
- Users clicks a pic/video/saves a pic or receives it via messaging app or mail
- User opens Google photos and google photos starts back up depending on your network preferences for the back( in case of android its happening in the background)
- User comes back to the app :
- to check out photos, searches
- clear up space/remove backed up photos/duplicate photos
- checkout memories
- edit photos in google photos app
- Create albums or share albums
Stage | metric | priority | comment |
Acquisition | app store conversion rate | secondary | Google photos comes pre installed on android devices, on apple devices are applicable for this data point |
activation | User sets up account/setting: % of users settings up an account | Primary | Critical to creating value for the user |
Retention | user comes back to the app/app open to use the app organise photos: Photos added in the last 7 days or created an album Edit photos: % of users who edited photo in the last 7 days Clear up storage: % of users who freed up space in the last 7 days | Primary | indicates users who've discovered value in the app |
Referral / revenue | Shared an album Added to an album shared Bought space | Primary | These users have discovered the app value and are comfortable sharing with friends using it/are comfortable paying for it |
Churn | Churn rate: Suddently stopped using the app/backing up continuously for 1 month/unistalled the app | Primary | These users left the app |
Primary success metric
if I wanted to track the success of the app
Users who've discovered value: % of installed based who are active on the app in any given week (WAU) which performed any of the actions mentioned under retention.
Delighted Users : I would look at % of active users sharing albums or buying space as a measure of users who are delighted by app
Product: My understanding of the Google Photos is that it is the desktop and mobile app that enables people to upload, store, organize, share, and edit photos. Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information, and this is Google’s way of organizing people’s photos.
Is that correct?
Interviewer: Don’t forget that it also includes videos and gifs.
Thanks for that clarification. So for the purpose of this exercise, if I want to refer to photos/gifs/videos together, I'll call them 'media'.
Scope. Great. Is there any specific element of the product you want to focus on? For example, are we focusing on mobile or web? Andriod or iOS? Personal or business use?
Interviewer: The whole product for everyone.
Goals: Okay, and is there any specific goal of measuring success here? E.g. are you trying to drive specific metrics like engagement or retention here? Or just broadly measuring success?
Interviewer: We’re most interested in engagement and retention. We want to gain market share from Facebook/Instagram.
User segments. Great. And are we focusing on any specific segments here within that? E.g. personal vs professional, influencers, young vs old. US vs international? I could also imagine segmenting by device type: Android vs iOS or low end vs high-end phones?
Interviewer: No specific segment. We’re interested in broad measures of success here.
Great. Okay, so next I want to map out the user journey
Take/Create photo/video/gif. To make this easier, I’m going to call these ‘media’
Upload media
Organize media (albums, etc)
Edit media
View media
Share media
'For you'. While this is not a stage in the user journey, per say, I want to point out the ‘For you’ AI suggestions feature. This is a powerful feature that drives engagement across many stages of the user journey, and I want to measure success of that as well.
Now I’ll identify relevant metrics for each of these stages in the user journey.
Metrics
User journey stage | Metrics |
Create media | Number of media taken and % growth |
Upload media | % increase in number of media uploaded % of new photos stored on Google Photos vs Facebook/Instagram |
Organize media | % growth in new albums created % growth in number of media added to an album |
Edit media |
|
View media | % change in media viewed |
Share media |
|
Interact with for you suggestions |
|
Additional segmentation. I want to point out that I would want to segment each of these metrics by
Age group
Personal vs professional/business
Web vs mobile
iOS vs Android (e.g. Google Photos is native in Android but not iOS)
Phone model within Android (E.g. it might be more successful on high-end phones with greater camera capabilities than lower end Android phones)
Geography (may be more or less popular in certain countries, and I’d want to understand this)
Now I want to prioritize the top metrics that I want to focus on. Ideally, I’d want to create a weighted singular metric across all of these dimensions that I can look at. A single rolled up number to measure success over time.
However, beyond that, if I’m going to choose from the metrics I mentioned above, I’ll prioritize based on which are best aligned to the goal you mentioned earlier: Engagement & market share relative to Facebook/Instagram
% of media upload market share of Facebook/Instagram vs Google Photos
% change in number of photos edited and % change in each type of photo edit (e.g. crop, rotate, filter, collage)
I’m choosing this because it indicates engagement, and it’s the type of action often done on Instagram or Facebook
% change in ‘For You’ interactions, and % change in each type of ‘For You’ suggestion interacted with.
Again, this is engagement, and I’m choosing it because it’s a powerful differentiating feature of Google Photos, and leverage Google’s core AI capabilities. It’s one of the main reasons why someone might choose Google Photos over Facebook/Insta
% change in outbound shared media and % change in opened inbound shared media
This is also a core reason why people use Facebook/Instagram -- to share their media. So I want to measure how Google is performing here as to gain market share it’s going ot be important to understand.
Summary So to summarize, my goal was to measure the success of Google Photos, emphasizing engagement and market share. I chose three metrics to focus on
% of media upload market share of Facebook/Instagram vs Google Photos
% change in number of photos edited, segmented by each type of photo edit (e.g. crop, rotate, filter, collage)
% change in total ‘For You’ interactions, segmented by each type of ‘For You’ suggestion interacted with.
% change in outbound shared media and % change in opened inbound shared media
How would you measure the success of Google Photos?
Some clarifications -
1/ Google photos is the photos storage app in Andorid which helps creating memories and stores your pictures through time -> Yes
2/ When we say ‘success’ did you want to focus on anything specific, else we can work through it in this exercise
Here is the structure ->
We will talk about the user base
Define the journey of the user base
Identify metrics along the way
Zero down on what is the most important metric that aligns with the goal of the app and hence for that we need to define the goal of the app.
Goal of Google photos -> Home for all photos and videos to bring memories to life and save/cherish what matters
Current user base is 1 billion
Journey ->
Awareness -> User made aware of google photos
Acquire -> User starting to use google photos
Use -> User using different parts of the product across through their lifecycle
Proponent -> Users ‘selling’ google photos for us
Exit -> Users stopping to use google photos
Awareness ->
1/ External awareness (ads, friends)
2/ Internal device awareness
Metrics are - Ads run, awareness campaigns run through proponents
Acquire ->
1/ New users starting to use photos
2/ User that left us coming back
Use ->
1/ Users using functionality such as -
Storing
Searching
Creating memories
Tagging
Sharing
Deleting
Organizing
Printing
Main metrics are ->
activities done per user per day/week/month
DAU, WAU, MAU
Proponents
Referrals done by users to non users through photos/memories sharing
Sharings per day, week, month
New apps installed through those sharings
Exit
Users dropped off after a month of use
Laggards using every few months
Monetization
Storage
Printing
Given the goal is to be the one place to store, share and create memories -> metrics i would focus on is active users and activities done by active users. This is important because this will tell us how well are able to keep users engaged, make them repeat users and have a great convenient experience.
How would you measure the success of Google Photos?
Google photos is a cloud-based photo sharing and storage service developed by google. It allows multiple users to upload and access photos and videos via mobile, tablet, PCs. It also provides several other options such as filters, crop etc.
Goal:- capturing the market thus more engagement and generating more revenue.
User journey:-
1.User clicks the photos.
2.Upload it on the google photos(automatic process).
3.edit the photos.
4.share with friends/family members.
Metric:-
· Activation
1. How many people have used it at least once during a session?
· Engagement
1. number of photos per user
2. number of content per user per category(eg. photos, videos)
3. average time spent per user during a session
· Referral
1.number of shares per user(means from one account how many people are connected on an average)
· Retention
1. 7 day retention
2. 30 day retention
· Monetization
1. Total ads clicks during a session
2. no. of people taken subscription for good quality and more storage.
Prioritizing the metric:- I am choosing number of photos per user, average time spent per user during a session, total ads clicks during a session,no. of people taken subscription for good quality and more storage as per our goal.
What users can do with Google Photos:
- upload photos
- store photos
- view photos
- search photos
- memories animations
- buy plans
- add family
- app installs
----------------------------------
metrics:
upload photos:
1. # of photos uploaded per week
2. # of users manually uploading per week
3. # of users automatically syncing per week
4. # of users for which uploads failed
store photos:
1. amount of gb used for storage per week
view photos:
1. # app opens per week
2. # of min spent on app per week
search photos:
1. search by text
2. search by face
memory animations
1. # of notifications
2. # of opens
3. # of users who watched the animations completely
buy plans
1. # of free users vs # of paid users
2. # of users who churned
add family
1. # of users who add family
2. # of users who share photos links with family
app installs
1. # of app installs
----------------------------------------
prioritize metrics
Google photos is a mature app (so revenue is important).
it has competitors from amazon photos and icloud photos (so app installs and engagement is important).
so these are the final metrics i would like to prioritize
competition
# of app installs
engagement
# app opens per week
# of min spent on app per week
# of photos uploaded per week
revenue
# of free users vs # of paid users
1. Describe the product - Google photos is a photo storage and sharing application. User can upload photos or videos, they can create albums to group photos or videos, they can share photos with other google users, they can share albums. You can search for photos
2. Goal of Google photos - The app itself if free. Google makes money on cloud storage. So the more pics users upload to google photos, they more money google will make. So primary goal would be to increase revenue from storage. Google can also use the content for training their AI/ML models and optimizing search tools. So overall, I think the goal of google photos is to increase the number of photos and videos that leads to increased revenue from storage. There are also many other photo sharing apps like Apple has a photos app which are also free. So there is a competition in the market on which app is the most popular. So I think increasing the number of users for the google photos app will also be a goal for this product.
3. User journey
- User downloads the app
- User logs in with their google account and sets up the app
- User uploads photos and videos
- User organizes them into albums by time, event, or other methods
- User shares photos with friends and family
- User searches for a photo
- User requires additional storage for the photos app when they run out of storage
- # of app dowloads
- # of users who logged into the app after downloading, # of users who created a profile within the app
- avg # of photos or videos uploaded per user per month, avg storage used per user for photos
- avg # of albums per user
- avg # of photos shared per user, avg # of albums shared per user, avg # of users who viewed shared photos or albums, avg # of invites to collaborate on albums (ex. multiple users uploading pics to an album from their recent trip), frequency of sharing per user (how often a user shares an album)
- # of search queries per day per user
- avg # of users buying more storage per month, avg storage amount purchased per month by existing users
5. Prioritize Metrics
1 and 2 are important metrics to track as they indicate how many new users are being acquired and activated. But it is a weak metric of success as downloading the app and logging in don't result into increase in revenue directly until the users start uploading photos. #3 is a strong metric that indicates if users are increasing their usage of Google Photos. #4 is about organizing, so not directly relevant to increase in revenue though it is a useful feature that must be tracked from an adoption perspective. #5 indicates engagement -> if more users engage using a common photo sharing application, it can drive an increase in # of users for that app (ex. if a group of 5 is collaborating to create an album of their recent trip and 4 use google photos, 5th person will automatically have to use the same app). #6 is not a direct indicator of growth in usage. #7 is a good metric but storage can be used for a lot of things so it is hard to say if user purchased more storage for photos or something else.
In summary, I would say that the measure of success of google photos is #3 -> avg # of photos or videos uploaded per user per month, avg storage used per user for photos, followed by #5
Describe the product: Google photos helps in organising the photos and videos and store the same in a structured manner so that user can access it in future to refresh the memories
Clarification/Assumptions
1. Is compatible for android users or apple users as well? Assuming for android users
2. Are there any specific versions of phones where it does not work?
3. Users can use it in phone as well as through desktop/laptop embedded in gmail
4. How we can define success? Assuming revenue generation and increasing customer engagement
5. Every user is having maximum one unique account associated with google photos and drive to store the photos
Who are the users?
Business users like professional photo shooters for wedding, modelling, news reporters.
Individual users those who would like to take pics from cell phone and save it as memory, photos taken for documenting purpose like taking picture of an accident at the moment to save as evidence.
Value Proposition from user’s perspective
1. Ability to click the photos and save it as memory in a structured manner
2. Changing the camera device example phone where users change the device on an average once in 2 years and lose the data or need to manage the data transfer carefully.
3. Google photos has given an option to the cell phone device makers to remove the gallery feature as now the pics and videos can be directly saved in the google photos
4. Instead of manging the hardware devices like pen drives (which might get lost over the period of time) the users can use google photos where data is managed in the cloud through google drive
5. Photos saved in google photo can be accessed from anywhere through any mobile device even offline
6. Even if cell phone device is damaged the photos and videos remain preserved which is unlikely to happen using pend drives
7. Google photos saves the pics with event details, like birthday, place and time and thus shares a beautiful auto compilation of memories to the users so that they can rejuvenate the moments which is unlikely to happen using pen drives. Data management is a manual activity in such devices
8. Integration with facebook and whatsup helps the user to store and manage all the photos in google in a user-friendly manner. They need not to hop over multiple hardware devices to collect the videos and photos
User journey
I would like to opt the cell phone as device to measure the success of google photos as it is being used by the masses across the countries.
A user login to the gmail account and set the google photo app. Clicks the photos from the mobile camera and the system saves the pics in google that gets stored in google drive.
User can take get the pics and videos from whatsapp, as screenshot, downloaded from any websites and follow the same journey
A user opens the google photos and revisit the respective folders to see the photos and delete them as needed.
Metrics
1. Average number of times does user visits google photos in a day considering the cell phone devices are being in the custody of user through out the day. Users even kept the cell phone device near the head while sleeping and can peep inside google photos in the mid night if unable to sleep
2. Percentage of people who deletes the unwanted pics and videos to manage limited space
3. Average amount of time being spent by each user on google photos
4. How many time the user has logged out from drive and google photos. Assuming the user can stay login in device even if not using the app
5. Average number of photos added by the user periodically by the user
6. Average number of photos downloaded periodically by the user
7. Average number of photos deleted by the user
8. Percentage increase in the users buying the storage space in google drive to keep the back up pf photos and videos
9. Revenue generated and the % increase in revenue from the users who buys additional storage space
10. Click through rate, average time the user spends while clicking inside the app and clicking to move out of the app
Evaluation
Metric no. | Reach to customer | Impact size | Efforts |
1 | H | H | L |
2 | M | L | L |
3 | H | H | L |
4 | H | H | M |
5 | H | H | M |
6 | H | H | L |
7 | L | L | L |
8 | H | M | M |
9 | H | M | L |
10 | H | H | L |
What is Google Photos
Google Photos is a image sharing application from Google, that let's users upload and share pictures of their life, with their group of friends.
It lets image owners creates albums, search for pictures within their albums with keyword search, edit pictures using filters, print pictures.
It lets image viewers engage with the content, by leaving comments, joining an album, contributing their own pictures to the event, tag users in a picture.
Google's Mission and How Google Photos contributes towards that mission
Alphanet's and Google's mission is to make the world around you universally accessible and useful and organizing world's information respectively. Google Photos ties well into that mission by letting people organize their life memories and sharing with their communities. This helps towards building communities and making life more meaningful and useful for people.
Goal
Given the current stage of Google Photos, it is most important to measure user engagement and retention, as it has been around for a long time and peole are well aware of the product. By increasing engagement and retention, it will help more and more people derive the value from the product, and also might help us make the product better
So we will focus on enagement and retention metrics for the product as the goal.
Users and User Journey
We will touch upon who the users are and go through their journey to identify some areas where we can measure success metrics for the applications.
Users can be classified as
1. Content creators - Image uploader, Album creators
2. Content consumers - Viewers, Commentators
User Journey - We will focus only on the mobile user experience to narrow the scope. It is also possibly the predomniant form factor for this app.
1. Awareness, Acquisiton - Users download the app and sign in with their Google Account.
2. Activation - Upload the first image, Share Image, View the image or album.
3. Engagement - Creators upload images, create and share albums. Consumers view images, engage with the album through likes, comments and shares. They can even join an album and upload pictures to it or tag others in an album.
4. Retention - Creators and consumers continue to use the service to do the above tasks in a periodic basis.
Metrics
We will focus on engagement and retention metrics like we called out above, since those are the areas when improved will lead to higher user satisfaction, keep users coming back to the platform and eventually lead to better monetization and growth for the app/company.
I would like to classify these metrics into 3 categories - Tracking metrics, North Star Metrics, and Counter Metrics
Engagement
1. Tracking metrics -
a. Number of pictures uploaded for a period of time (day, week, month)
b. Number of albums watched for 1000 albums created
c. Engagement score for 1000 viewed albums (This could be a weighted aggregate metric of comments, likes and shares, with shares getting higher weight, followed by comments and likes)
d. Daily, Weekly, Monthly Active Users, active defined by a user who at least views or uploads one photo/album in a week.
2. North Star Metric -
a. Time spent on the app (TOS) - The eventual goal for Google Photos is to get people to spend increased time on the platform.
b. Number of albums/photos viewed/ 100 mins of time spent on app - But we must be careful to ensure that this is meaningful time that the users are spending and they are getting value from it. Some ways to ensure that users are finding value with their time spent on app is to have a relative of albums/photos viewed, engaged with for every 100 mins of time spent on Google Photos. We want to work with data scientists to ensure that this number is kept at a reasonable limit.
3. Counter Metrics -
We want to watch for the following counter metrics and ensure they stay low so as to avoid branding risk
a. Number of reported albums
b. Number of reported users
c. Number of albums/photos viewed/ 100 mins of time spent on app - This metric should stay at a reasonable value (say 30-40 pictures per 100 mins. Actual values can be worked out with data science teams)
d. Dislike counts
Prioritization of metrics
We would prirotize metrics 1a, 1c, 2b for tracking and NSM and watch for 3a and 3b counter metrics to ensure the quality of the content remains high
Goal:
Candidate: Google might use photos to augment the google ecosystem by serving incerasing number of use cases for the customers where customers can use photos to store images, share with friends/family, etc. It will help to build a moot around various suite of services that google offers. So I assume the goal is to drive the user adoption rather than the revnue.
Interviewer: Yes, it is to drive the user adoption.
Actions:
I intend to brainstorm various actions that users can take when they engage with google photos that could be used as a measure of user adoption
A) downloading google photos from app store
B) storing images and videos to the google photos
C) sharing photos and videos from google photos to other people through social media (whatsapp, facebook, youtube), mail (gmail, yahoo mail), etc
D) editing images and photos on google photos
E) viewing media stored on google photos
F) bookmarking favorite files on the google photos
I would prioritize top of the funnel metrics to track, to get a sense of broader user base and their actitivities.
Metrics:
The metrics that I would track to measure the user adoption of the google photos is a) numer of google photo downloads b) number of users that use photos to store images and videos c) number of users that share content through google photos
Evualations/trade-offs:
These metrics would not differentiate between deep enagement and shallow enagement. For example, heavy users that collect, store and share few thousands of files to ones that have few hundreds.
Vision -> Rapidly become worlds biggest photo repository
Customer segment --> People care about High-quality photos that may be taken at their wedding or special events. Want to be able to share conveniently, using other products in google suite( Gmail, drive, etc)
Objective -> 1. Create a better customer experience and generate revenue ( by selling disk space or creating a market place to connect studios with users)
Competition -> Box and Dropbox
Product differentiation --> Compression algorithm to reduce the size of photos while still maintaining quality. 2. Platform integration and ease of sharing via Gmail and Drive. 3. Marketplace to connect studios and Users
Customer Journey -- Trigger notification -> create a new account --> Add photos --> Organise folders --> Share albums --> edit/view photos --> exit the platform
When can we say the product was a success ??
1. Customer Acquisition spent (Ad, marketing) is less than of the CLT
2. Total number of users acquired is 0.5% of the total google's user-base
3. Engagement -- in Year 1 --- uploading, sharing, and organizing is at least 50% of the engagement of other competitors (year 1)
4. Retention -- heavy users (30% of the total users active on google photos ) visit 4-5 times a month on the platform
5. Monetization -- adding marketplace and selling space -- should be 50 million in year 1( less revenue expectation since we are a new player in the market and want to focus on user acquisition)
6. Technology -- Our compression algorithm should decrease at least 10% of the storage size compared to other platforms
7. Net promoter score
Prioritization -- Based on Objectives and Vision -- I would focus on Acquisition and Engagement
Summarisation
Product Description
In my understanding Google photos is photo storage and sharing service developed by Google. Google photos allows users to:
- Back up their photos and videos and making them accessible from their phone, tablets, computers.
- Search their photo library to easily find specific picture or set of pictures.
- Pool photos with friends and family members by creating shared albums.
- Enables users to comment on pictures thus creating a social platform within a shared album
Is my understanding correct?
*Let us move ahead with the assumption that this understanding is correct.
Goal
As stated above Google photos is built to store and organize the photos automatically. This is quite in line with the goal of the company ‘To organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful’.
The goal of Google Photos is to become a one stop solution for the users to manage a huge media library.
I’ll say the main goal is engagement with secondary goal of retention, referral and acquisition.
User Journey
Now let us take a look at the user journey while using Google Photos and prioritize the features on a scale of 1-5 (5- highest priority)
- User installs the app. This shows that the user is aware about the app and is interested is using it. I would like to prioritize this as 3, because in almost all android devices it is pre-install. So it doesn’t clearly indicate that the user installed the app because he has the desire to try the app.
- User uses it to create/edit pictures/videos. This indicates the engagement of user with the app. I will mark it as 5.
- User takes a regular backup of the pictures/videos in Google Photos. This indicates if the user is actually interested in using this as its primary backup medium. Therefore I would like to rate it as 5.
- User creates a shared album with friends/family. This leads to referring Photos to users in the shared album that might not have tried the product yet. This also signals the engagement of the user. So I will prioritize it as 5.
- Users in shared album comment on the uploaded content. This feature is also indicative of user engagement, however the goal of app is not to increase social interaction within the app therefore I’ll rate it as 3.
- Users download, share the automatic creation (auto edited pictures, memories in the form of collages, videos, gif) of Google Photos. This is also targeted to keep the users engaged, even though this is not the primary purpose of the Photos, but this metric also leads us to identify if the users like the enhancements suggested by the app, so I’ll rate it as 4.
- Users use the search feature of the app to filter the media files. I will rate it as 2 as the user might not have the need to search the content in the library very frequently.
On top of the above metric, I would like to also look into one higher level engagement metric that is stickiness. It helps us define how likely the user is to return and use Photo app for sharing the media.
Prioritize the metrics
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| Filter media files using the search. |
| Users download, share the automatic creation (auto edited pictures, memories in the form of collages, videos, gif) of Google Photos | - Users use it to edit pictures/videos and create collages, gifs. - User takes a regular backup of the pictures/videos in Google Photos - User creates a shared album with friends/family |
Now that we have come up with a few metric on the engagement of Photos, let us see the priority:
- % increase in the number of users using the Photos app to create/edit and backup the media files in a week.
- % increase in the number new shared albums created by users in a week.
- Stickiness.
- % increase in the number of new users added in shared albums in a week.
- % increase in the number of downloads/share of the content created automatically by AI per week.
- % increase in the number of activities in shared album (such as number of views, commenting) per week.
- % increase in the number of new users per week.
- Churn rate per month.
Summary
Google Photos is created by Google to increase user engagement by sharing their data (pictures/videos) with a goal to be single largest media library. By looking at the user journey we are able to figure out key metrics to measure the success. Metrics such as % increase in the of users using the app to create, edit and backup media content, % in the number of shared albums, stickiness, churn rate per month would clearly help us measure the success of Google Photos.
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