Evaluate the upsides and downsides of building a super app — an app having all major B2C features including entertainment, e-commerce, food ordering, hotel booking, cab booking, chat, holiday planning, gaming, med ordering, service booking, etc.
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A super app that integrates all major B2C services in one place, either Built in-house (like Amazon expanding into multiple domains) or Acting as an aggregator (onboarding services from external players, like Google integrating travel and shopping).
Assuming a hybrid approach and building for Google. First-party + Third-party Services - Some features will be built internally, while others will be aggregated from partners.
Why are we trying to build this?For Users: Seamless, one-stop solution for all their daily needs.
For Business:
Reduce customer acquisition costs (leverage existing Google ecosystem).
Increase engagement & stickiness.
Upsell/cross-sell services - driving more revenue.
Dominate the B2C landscape by owning the full journey from search to transaction.
AI Agent: A conversational AI layer to process user queries and automate actions.
Tightly coupled with Google Search, Google Maps, Assistant, Pay, Shopping, Travel, and Ads to convert searches into transactions.
Who is the user?
Existing Google users (Search, Maps, Assistant, Play Store, Shopping, Pay, etc.).
Any consumer looking for an all-in-one digital experience.
Aspect | Upside | Downside |
User Jobs-to-be-Done (JTBD) | Convenience through a unified interface, reducing friction. | Users may prefer specialized apps for better, tailored experiences. |
Trends & Adoption | Growing shift towards conversational AI and agentic interfaces. | Users are still accustomed to app-based interactions, making transition slow. |
User Experience | Eliminates the need for multiple apps, acting as a personal AI assistant. | A generalist AI may struggle with handling complex edge cases. |
Conclusion: Success depends on delivering a seamless AI-driven experience that competes with dedicated service apps.
2. Feasibility (Technical & Operational Challenges)
Aspect | Upside | Downside |
Tech & AI Readiness | Google has strong AI, Search, Maps, and Payments infrastructure. | AI struggles with personalization, contextual understanding, and edge cases. |
Integration Complexity | In-house services ensure smooth user experience. | Maintaining high-quality services across multiple verticals is challenging. |
Regulatory & Compliance Risks | Easier regulatory management if services are built internally. | AI-driven transactions and data privacy risks may trigger regulatory scrutiny. |
Trust & Adoption | Google’s existing ecosystem builds user trust and facilitates adoption. | Users may hesitate to trust a single AI handling financial and personal data. |
Issues with Current Partners | Aggregation of services can enhance user convenience. | Third-party service providers may resist integration, fearing loss of control. |
Conclusion: Technically feasible for companies like Google, but AI maturity, regulations, and partner dynamics pose challenges.
3. Viability (Business Perspective & Market Potential)
Aspect | Upside | Downside |
Monetization & Cross-Sell | Enables cross-selling, increasing revenue per user. | High initial user acquisition cost as users adapt to new interfaces. |
Blended User Acquisition Cost | Google can leverage existing user base across Search, Maps, and Pay. | Competing with dominant vertical players like Uber and Zomato is tough. |
Long-Term Investment | Early entry into AI-driven interfaces positions the company for the future. | Requires massive investment in AI, infrastructure, and regulatory compliance. |
Issues with Current Partners | Owning the full stack increases profitability and control. | Partners may retaliate by limiting data access or pulling out of integrations. Negative impact on ads revenue. |
Conclusion: Strong business case, but managing partner relationships will be a key risk factor.
Recommendation
For a company like Google or Amazon, building an agentic super app is feasible and has strong business potential.
Challenges to consider:
User adoption—changing habits from app-based to AI-driven interactions.
Regulatory scrutiny—especially around AI-driven recommendations, financial transactions, and privacy.
Partner conflicts—companies like Uber, Zomato, and Airbnb may resist integration if Google starts competing with them.
The opportunity lies in converting search intent into transactions seamlessly and cross-selling across multiple services in a frictionless manner
- I am assuming question is more on if this should be done and pros and cons and not how ? Yes
- Also the app would be done by Google ? Yes
- The intention is to include major B2C features irrespective of the fact if Google does it now or not ? Yes
- Evaluate if such an app aligns with vision & mission of the company.
- For each of the stake-holders, I would look at the Upsides & Downsides.
- Stakeholders are Google As a company itself.
- Strategic Evaluation - I would use Porter's Five Forces to check business environment to see if this is a sound strategy.
- Business Evaluation - I would then look at how this app can impact Google in terms of revenue, costs and other intangible things
- Execution Evaluation - I would then look at Strengths & Weaknesses that Google have which can impact execution.
- Product, development, QA and Engineering Teams
- Consumers
- Stakeholders are Google As a company itself.
- Strategy Evaluation
Criteria | Comments | Type |
Competitive Rivalry | There is a huge competitive rivarly in the space. First of all there are incumbents which are doing one thing really well and secondly biggies like Amazon also are getting into super app | Downside |
Supplier Power | Since lot of these things will involve getting data from other third party sources, the partners/suppliers do carry some power. Latest eg being in Australia where google was not allowed to publish news. So partners can team up and shout 'monopoly' to get some power over google. | Downside |
Buyer Power | Buyers have no power except the fact that they can delete or not use the app. They can't dictate terms to Google | Upside |
Threat of Substitution | There is a major threat of substitution. But if done right, google brand name is strong enough to make users switch to google app. | Neutral |
Threat of New Entry | While the threats are there, Google can safely ward of new competitors | Neutral |
- Business Evaluation
Criteria | Comment | Type |
Get more users | Get more users on the app. By having a super-app , Google could attract more users . Users prefer to have lesser number of apps | Upside |
Open up newer revenue streams. | Get new revenue streams. This app could open up newer revenue streams for Google. For eg it could take commissions from hotels if booking is done via this app | Upside |
Increase Ad Revenues | Google will get access to more users and more categories for advertising. | Upside |
More Data of more Users across categories | Google would be able to collect more behavioural data which they can then use in advertising business and personalisation leading to higher engagement. | Upside |
Privacy & Legal Aspects | Getting into a super-app might open up plethora of privacy & legal issues mainly around collecting user data as well as creating a monopoly | Downside |
Cost | Lot of the feature in super-app require google to venture into heavy operations | Downside |
- Execution Evaluation
Criteria | Type | |
Product & Engineering | Google is capable of getting this executed but would be challenging | Downside |
Operations | For lot of these features, there is a heavy operational aspect which Google hasn't done in the past. So this will require a heavy investment in getting the right expertise to make the individual features of super apps successful. | Downside |
Business & Partnerships | Provided that app is build, Google would be able to to do the right partnerships to get the required data as well as make the app profitable | Upside |
Criteria | Comment | Type |
Ease of Designing | While it would be difficult to design such an app, it can be done | Neutral |
Ease of Building & doing enhancements | Building such an app and that too in scalable manner would definitely be a challenge for engineering. | Downside |
Ease of Testing & Maintenance | Testing effort would also be huge. It would get even more complicated if components of app are not independent enough and one component impacts another | Downside |
Criteria | Comment | Type |
Convenience | A super app would definitely be super convenient for the users as most of the users prefer to not have many apps | Upside |
Ease of Use | More features mean more complicated UI and UX. This can be partially handles by a good UX | Neutral |
App Size | App size is a major concern and there is corelation between app size & downloads. Due to so many features app would be big in size. This can impact users as they will not like to download | Downside |
Switching to another app | Since super-app is not solving a new problem, users may need to switch from individual apps they have been using | Downside |
Clarifying questions:
This is a mobile or web app? I’m going to assume it is a mobile app
Going to assume the user base is global
Will evaluate both sides based on some dimensions that would be useful to stakeholders:
Revenue upside
User experience
Execution - technical and logistics
Competitive differentiation
Upside:
If we are able to ship an app of this magnitude I think revenue would definitely increase a lot due to the many areas that the app can service. Execution of the app is key since the user experience can seem very convoluted and complicated with many use cases tied into one. To recognize the revenue upside, the execution and user experience has to be great
From a user experience side - users could potentially find the utility of a app like this pretty useful. A single vendor to order and receive services for. This is not as far fetched as one would think. Consider Amazon - they do grocery delivery, e commerce retail with all kinds of products, develop their own clothing line, hardware business, streaming music/video services
ANother benefit from for the user is that they obtain customer service from a single source for all their services. A concierge service that offers higher levels of CS could be an added stream of revenue
Another benefit for users would be that these businesses are often complementary - ie based on user behavior ie entertainment choices, food otdering - the app could provide recommendations for vacation experiences and suggest times to purchase vacations and flights based on preferences
Execution - this will mainly be a huge challenge so I will reserve it for my downside analysis.
Competition - if we can execute, this app could be one of the most innovative apps in the world. Prob no other company could pull this off and so this could have a large competitive advantage over other players. WIll need to watch out for govt anti competition laws and could get into trouble with govt regulations.
Differentiation would be the one stop shop for all online services
SIngle vendor with a consistent user experience for all services
SIngle point of customer service
Downside:
Revenues could suffer due to lack of focus in the business. The amount of people and logistics to make all these mini businesses successful would be large. In reality picking a few related, high potential businesses to target in an app would most likely generate more revenue than an app with many businesses like this
User experience will be difficult to get right with so many businesses combined into a single app. The app would feel clunky - it would be very easy to develop different parts fo teh app in isolation and cause the UX to be disjointed
Execution - would be a huge challenge. Eng wise this would require a large eng team. Even if there was a shared platform with a lot of shared infra and components, the complexity of designing something like this is large. Coordination between the diff eng teams would be very challenging as well. Creating a unified business strategy that allows the company to appear unified would also be a very difficult challenge. Finally business logistics would be very complicates as the business appear pretty diverse, ie gaming is not very related to hotel booking, cab sharing. All of these mini businesses would almost operate on their own and are diverse enough that logistically operations may not be able to be shared between mini-businesses
Conclusion
I would recommend against creating a mega app like this. Instead I would focus on some high value businesses that were complementary
Travel and leisure app - news and media on vacation destinations, experiences with additional complementary businesses like vacation reservations, food reservations and recommendations, service bookings, ride sharing integration, e2e transportation reservations, user bulletin boards to discuss vacation ideas and planning
This would focus the business more on some high value use cases which should have higher revenue potential than a jack of all trades
User experience would be much better since the app wouldn’t be so complicated and still benefit from s single point of CS for services that are complimentary
Execution would be less challenging from eng and logistics standpoint
- Clarify:
- Is this super app built by Google? Assume yes.
- Is this app for a mobile device or a specific channel (desktop, iPad, etc.)? Assume mobile.
- Is there a strategy / goal that is motivating Google to build this app (ex. gain new users, increase revenue, etc.)? Assume I as the PM will have to choose this goal. (This answer is tailored towards the goal of getting more users and consequently being able to run ads / drive revenue.)
- Describe the Product: Google is building a super app that meets all of a user's needs in the B2C space. Within each of the categories listed, there are many builds needed to meet the customer's needs. For example, within the "entertainment" category, Google could build virtual / digital entertainment: movies, etc. or it could build ways to book movie theatre tickets, play tickets, etc.
- Strategic Evaluation Framework: I will evaluate the upsides and downsides of this app based on this high level framework:
- Alignment to Google's mission
- Strengths (broken further down by strengths for Google and strengths for user)
- Weaknesses (broken down further by weaknesses for Google and weaknesses for user)
- Opportunities for Google
- Threats to Google
- Strategic Evaluation:
- Alignment to Google's Mission:
- Google aims to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible / useful. A super app aligns to this mission in that the app brings brings together all sorts of information and makes it accessible to the end user. The user can access all this information in a single space.
- Google already has a diversity of apps (ex. Google Docs, Gmail, Google Photos, Google Maps), which make it seem like it's already working towards the super app mission of bringing together all sorts of information and being needed in the user's life. A super app seems like an extension of their work.
- Strengths:
- GOOGLE STRENGTHS:
- INFORMATION: Google already has access to a lot of information (ex. Google search), which it can leverage to build this app.
- PERSONALIZATION: A super app gives Google more access to user data, which allows them to build a better personalized experience for the user, which enhances user experience.
- AD REVENUE: A super app provides Google more opportunities to serve advertisements to users, which drives revenue for the company.
- USER ENGAGEMENT: In a giant ecosystem, the user is more likely to engage with other aspects of the app they may not have before. For example, if a user goes into the app to purchase an item through the eCommerce store, they may see Gaming within this app and may decide to explore Gaming after their purchaes.
- USER STRENGTHS:
- CONVENIENCE: User has 1 place to go for everything, which is convenient. There is no need for multiple apps.
- TIME SAVE: User saves time by avoiding multiple apps and bouncing from app to app.
- SEAMLESS EXPERIENCE: The user experience is likely better because the user does not need to do redundant actions (like login, authentication, update payment information, etc.) because hypothetically the features of the app should all talk to each other / share information
- GOOGLE STRENGTHS:
- Weaknesses:
- GOOGLE WEAKNESSES:
- TEAM:
- RESOURCES: The super app build requires multiple resources / forces expertise in many areas.
- TEAM PARTNERSHIP: All these partners will need to coordinate well, and given the number of resources required to build such an app, it could be difficult.
- COST: It would be a high cost to Google to maintain all these experiences in one app.
- TECH LIMITATIONS:
- CONTENT LIMITS / QUALITY: There may be limits to how much you can physically build into a super app, so experiences may be less up to par in terms of quality.
- CONTENT RENDERING: It takes time to render a lot of content. A slower rendering time will be a poor experience for the user.
- MEMORY / RAM: This app will likely require a lot of memory / storage on Google's end and the user's end.
- SERVER REQUESTS: With a super app, there will likely be a lot of users / lots of server requests at the same time, which increases the likelihood of the app crashing.
- LEGAL:
- RULES / REGULATIONS: If this app were to run in multiple countries (assuming yes), there are a number of legal implications / rules and regulations that the app would have to adhere to across markets. It will be difficult to ensure compliance for each app feature across every market.
- DATA SECURITY: Google will have to take extra precautions to ensure that the user data is safe across multiple features. Given the breath of the app, it may be harder to do so. (For example, is my payment information secure in both the Gaming feature and the eCommerce feature.) If there are third party partners, Google will have to ensure that each third party (assuming there may be a lot), is using data securely.
- TEAM:
- USER WEAKNESSES:
- DATA SECURITY: User may be concerned over giving all their data to Google. They may also want to understand who has access to my data, and given the breath of the app, there may be a number of third parties that have access to this information, which the user may not like.
- UI: User may be overwhelmed by too much app content. (Design here is paramount to avoid user confusion.)
- UX: It will be a poor experience for the user if the app is slow or crashes a lot because of the volume of information.
- GOOGLE WEAKNESSES:
- Opportunities: Google has the opportunity to gain a bigger footprint / gain more users. Ultimately, more users, will allow them to run more ads, which drives revenue for the company.
- Threats: Within each of the apps features, there are already big tech companies that present sizeable competition. (For example, within eCommerce space, Shopify is a big competitor.) There are also big tech companies already taking steps towards becoming the "super app" to the its end users. For example, Apple has expanded its reach with apps like Apple Maps, Apple Music, Apple Fitness+, etc. Amazon has also expanded it's reach as well. It's moving from being a traditional mass online shop to offering experiences, like Amazon Prime Video, etc.
- Alignment to Google's Mission:
- Summary: Overall, I think a super app is in line with Google's mission, and it is already building multiple apps that allow it to integrate in multiple aspects of a user's life. Given the tech limitations, I believe a mobile super app is likely not the right approach for Google to take. This app may be better suited in a different channel, like desktop or voice. (Within the mobile space, it may be better for the app to be split into multiple apps.)
Evaluate the upsides & downsides of building a super-app (an app having all major B2C features including entertainment, e-commerce, food-ordering, hotel-booking, cab-booking, chat, holiday-planning, gaming, med-ordering, service-booking, etc.)?
Clarifying Questions
1. When you say app – what do you mean – web app, phone app, something else? – I assume the answer to all will be - you are the PM, you decide. (I think this question is pivotal – In my head I’ve already started going though a list of pros / cons and then it hit me that Google is already building this app – it’s Google assistant. At first, I was thinking that the design of a traditional phone app would be a mess (I got hung on the word app) – different tabs / tiles / cards for each section too many choices…. But if it’s a voice app….)
2. Which company is going to offer all these services? I assume the answer will be this app will broker out the services to multiple service providers?
3. What is the reason for building the supper app – I assume the answer will be - you are the PM?
4. Who is building the app? I assume the answer will be Google.
5. We are building a supper app but I still want to know if I should consider any constraints? I assume the answer is no – just evaluate the Upsides and downsides
Criteria | Upside | Downside | Conclusion |
Google Mission – Generally Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it accessible and useful | A super app if done right has the potential to bring much of the world’s information into a single location and that is very Google |
| Upside |
Google Mission – the next billion users | A super app if done right has the potential to service a broad consortium of users. Within each set of functionalities, we will need to evaluate the personas and make sure that we hit major use cases and enough edgier cases to make it useful. |
| Upside |
Usefulness | It would clearly be very convenient to have a single place to go as a user. Today I have individual apps - open table, Amazon, Uber, Lyft, Skype games. Having everything in one might be handy. | Today I have all these apps on my phone I can download the service that best fits my needs I can choose between What’s App and FB Messenger or Skype. I can use uber or lyft or both. | Draw |
Convenience – see above it would be convenient to have a single ap |
|
| Upside |
Huge BI and opportunities for AI | With all consumer behavior moving though a single App data on individual behavior and group trends would be more possible than ever. At the individual level we can see the behavior of a user across their actions and make recommendations. Given huge sets of other user data we can make better predictions based on similar users’ patterns |
| Upside |
Privacy | By putting data in a single place there is less points of vulnerability – in a multi app environment each app and company is a point of vulnerability. | Privacy will be a big concern. Today users may believe that they have greater privacy by splitting their actions into discrete apps spread across multiple companies. | Downside – generally I think the public and the media will fall in line with big brother not it is safer consolidated. |
Design | This is really going to be a key factor. At first, I thought this would be a huge negative. However, as I worked the question I realized how this was already happening. Google Maps leads to restaurants, restaurants lead to reviews, which leads to reservations, which leads to taxi hailing. | This is really going to be a key factor. At the top of the problem my mind started racing on two negative factors design was one. I immediately went to classic app design and started thinking about multiple tabs, cards, titles, swipes to navigate from area one to area two – if you the app is simply a bundle of apps then design could be really hard to use. | Upside if done right. |
Development / scalability |
| As you create a fully integrated app with seamless transitions between one set of functionality and the next - the code base will expand and updates to any specific area will need to be checked against the system as a whole – this means that dev and release times will expand and new functionality may decrease over time | Downside |
Specialty vs generality |
| Today I can download the app that most fits my needs. My persona and user needs may be different from the general population and unless the functionality covers my user needs a general supper app may be a watered down version that only covers core use cases – which is fine until your use case isn’t covered and then because we as human focus on negatives more than positives – we may grow to dislike the supper app in whole. | Downside |
Competition other companies | As I’ve been working on the problem it is becoming clearer to me that other companies are working on this already – Amazon has shopping, groceries, grocery delivery, video, music. Facebook has news, social, chat, shopping. |
| Upside |
Competition market |
| Today we live in a fractured world of choices. Where we as users are free to pick the solutions that best fit our needs. This free market rewards useful innovation. In a world of super apps the table stake for entry may be to high for these companies to enter the marketplace and we may end up with monopolies which most economists generally think are bad. | Downside |
As I’ve been working on the problem it is becoming clearer to me that other companies are working on this already – Amazon has shopping, groceries, grocery delivery, video, music. Facebook has news, social, chat, shopping. Google has multiple services, search, maps, chat, restaurant reviews, restaurant reservations, taxi hailing, Shopping. Google deliveries these though multiple apps but you already see integration. Maps links to restaurants, restaurant reviews, restaurant reservations, and taxi hailing. And of course we already see Google’s Smart Assistant, Alexa and Siri moving in this direction. In general given that design seems to have been overcome by having single purpose apps like maps that then branch out and integrate to other services and that technology is moving towards voice that leaves the pitfalls of privacy, development scalability, specialty vs generality and market monopolies. Privacy will be a concern regardless. Development scalability as well as specialty vs generality are already being overcome as part of the culture of organizations like Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple. Finally as long the market allows organizations like Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple to remain intact and accepts that the competition between these organizations overcomes the concerns of monopolization then we already see the trend of the super app becoming a reality.
clarifying questions
1. am i a PM in a large company or a startup who wants to build - Microsoft
2. are these succesful biz existing offline or will they launch online only
3. Geography- india
Scene
Company :
Mission - increase productivity through tech
- strategically fits into the mission as all of these services online will help in improving efficiency by cutting cutting middle men present offline
competition / market
- google and meta have not build any super app
- tata has built a super app and has not been successful . WeChat has built in China and has been very successful
Pros
- common customer base across use cases
- one time customer acquisition instead of different acquisiiton needed in case of separate apps
- cross sell and up-sell possible.
- loyalty construct across use cases possible
Cons
- Positioning issue: different use cases like entertainment vs food ordering.
- app navigation issues : when a customer comes for a specific use case like food ordering , how to understand his intent and direct him to the right flow for completing his food order without any friction
- repeat and word of mouth: how to prevent poor performance of one use from affecting customer trust and loyalty for trying out another use case
- Design related challenges - how to give users the right User experience throughout the app across use cases
Conclusion
The downsides are much greater than the upsides and we should not invest in building a super app
Clarifying questions:
- would this be a web app or a mobile app? mobile app
- are we planning to include any other services apart from the ones mentioned?
- are we planning to launch the product in one -go or in an iterative manner?
- is this for a startup or for a big organisation? (a big organisation planning to enter into the digital market) like Adani
- do we have any budget constraints? No (we have deep pockets)
- how big is the team size (approx 500 employees, 20 people in product, 100 in business, 100 in development, 50 in design, 50 in marketing etc.?
- are we planning to outsource any part of the development/ gtm? no
- will these services be offered by the company itself or are these third party merchants? Some will be in-house some will be third party
- What goal are we trying to achieve with the product? we are trying to capture a new user base which is different from our traditional user base. we are foraying into building digital services
- So I am assuming we have not built anything till now digitally? No
- where will we be launching this product? India
- are we targeting any specific userbase? urban India
Goal:
Business goal: to acquire more users digitally, to expand user base and to connect them all digitally. to monetize via making your own services available digitally and to also earn commission from third party vendors.
Product goal: to simplify access to all B2C services of the company to a user base, all services under one roof so that the user does not have to go a new app.
Market overview:
TAM: total adult population of India (70% of 1.4B) = 980M people with smartphone access: 60% of this: 588M ~ 600M
SAM: urban population of India: 30% = 180M
SOM: chances of acquiring more number of users if we have a strong brand name, if our usecase is large and if we are able to deliver better features and better offerings than our competitors. still taking into account network effects of already established products, we can obtain atleast 50% of the SAM: 90M
Porter’s five forces:
Threat of New entrants: Low (You need deep pockets to build a super-app, there are many small ventures catering to a specific offering but not many starting out with this)
Threat of substitutes: Moderate (For some lines of businesses like travel booking we have agents, for gaming we have offline gaming zones, sports etc. So for some LOBs there are a lot of substitutes and for some like e-commerce and food ordering etc. threat of substitutes is low.
Industry rivalry: Very High: There are multiple players that are stalwarts in their respective field with very strong network effects, for e-commerce you have amazon, flipkart etc. and for F&B you have zomato, swiggy etc. There is also Jio which is a super app with multiple users and with a very strong backing, PayTM etc.
Bargaining power of buyers: High (Multiple platforms they can go to)
Bargaining power of suppliers: Moderate (some vendors our own but some vendors are third party so they can go to multiple platforms.
Maybe talk about the internal organizational structure as well.
Pros:
- large market that we can target.
- strong financial backing
- good team to build a product / good team structure
- own multiple businesses
- low bargaining power of suppliers
- strong brand name
Cons:
- too large a usecase to solve for
- multiple players in the industry with strong network effects.
Basis on this we can give a suggestion that if we should start with 1-2 sub-products that are being under-served for eg: medicine/ e-commerce etc in a different user-base like (Tier 3 towns/ rural towns). we should solve for these pain points for an under-served user base.
Upsides
1) If the app is built efficiently , it can become a one stop destination for the user and would replace multiple apps(Saves time)
2) Sharing of data can become more streamlined which can lead to better product and service recommendation. Eg- If the user is looking for a holiday plan to city X, we can recommend our cab serices
3) Bundles having multiple products, services can be setup which can ultimately lead to more subscription and revenue. Also this might help selling services/products which are difficult to sell
4)Advertisement revenue would be massive considering the level we will be operating
5) One time payment and information addition for the user
Downsides-
1) Maintaining such large amount of data and infrastructre will come with huge costs and monetizing it might take time.
2) Would be tough to compete with exisitng players for respective serives
3) Generally govt policies around the world barring few tend to support an ecosystem of fair play and equal oppurtunitites. MIght face backlash on this front
4) Bug Trackability issue
I have written this keeping any tech giant (Google/Amazon/FB/WeChat etc.) into account and not only Google.
Upsides | Downsides |
|
|
| 2. If there’s one bad experience, user would have bad perception on all other related products (Example: FB data privacy issues creeped on Whatsapp as well and users started using telegram) |
| 3. Tech investments will be huge. Cost of maintaining is huge. Any downtime experienced will impact a huge scale of users. |
| 4. Any data breach will impact a huge scale of users |
| 5. Being a market leader creates a monopoly and companies can control prices |
Upsides of a super app
One stop solution: Users can address all their needs in a single app without the need to download multiple apps
Unified user experience across various use cases such e-commerce, hotel booking, etc: Users are accustomed to the user experience, becuase super app maintians the consistent user experience across different use cases
One time payment set up: Customers can set up a payment only once, and customers can track all their spending habits in one place holistically and easily
One time address set up: Customers can set up an address once, and forget it.
One username and password: Customers do not have to create multiple username and passwords for different use cases.
Better personalization: We can offer the customers the best personalized experience across the board because of the bredth of data that we collect from e-commerce, hotel booking, ride booking, gaming, holiday planning, etc.
Downside of a super app:
Lack of product differentitation: It is easier said than done that single super app can deliver product differentiation across all the use cases. For example: As for Hotel booking, specialty company in hotel booking tend to be feature rich in terms of more selection, more deals, better discovery experience.
It is might be difficult to build create that enriched experience for all use cases better than the each corresponding specialty companies such as expedia for hotel booking, kayak for aiport booking, etc.
Engagement across the board: Customers tend to have brand loyalty towards certain brands. For instance, customers might be prime member with Amazon that they prefer Amazon for e-commerce. This brand loyalty and famility with the Amazon product will make it difficult for the customer to move to super app to do online shopping. Similarly, customers would have purchased membership and would have been used to UX of specialty companies in terms of other use cases as well.
Anti-trust scrunity and data privacy issues: Given the wealth of the data that the super app generates about the customer, it would invite scrunity from the government and international watchdogs.
Since the company serves all the use cases, it would attract anti-trust scrunity from the various governmental agencies.
Outage and data hack: Customers will be negatively affected and their digital life will come to a standstill when there is a outage. It could be crippling for the customers.
When there is a data hack, it will expose customer's entire digital life to the world.
Performance issues: Due to the breadth of the use cases that is served by the app, it might cause the app to be little clunky and cause performance issues.
Discoverablility issues: Given the myriad of different offerings within the same app, customers might have trouble in finding the service that they want.
Assumptions:
iOS app, Android app, and web where it makes sense.
User exp: Single app on iOS or -> open -> way to perform each of the above functions.
On Webapp → Visit the main url -> way to perform each function
Clarification question: Is this for Google? Yes.
Lets simplify the analysis and focus on an iOS app. The analysis will be mostly applicable to android and webapp.
Current user experience:
User has a set of apps on phone. Based on intent, user decides to open a app and do the activity. If app doesnt exist, user searches on the web to find the right app, or on app store for the app, installs and does the activity.
Current google capabilities w.r.t impacting user experience
1/ No control on iOS
2/ Some control on Android. Can ensure certain apps are default.
3/ Less control on web. Can ensure that Chrome, Mozilla, Safari default to Google websites for certain activities
Current google capabilities in terms of actually providing a service
1/ Entertainment - youtube
2/ Grocery delivery - Google express?
Google doesnt provide any other actual service listed in the question. Instead, Google provides “information services” with a set of apps
1/ Search
2/ Maps
Productivity: GSuite apps
To provide any of the above services, Google will first need to build or acquire the service. For e.g, enable purchase of movie tickets using a google app. Assuming that Google acquires/builds such services, what are the pros and cons?
There are multiple stakeholders in answering this question: User, Google, Competitors, platform owner such as iOS/Android.
Super app:
Pros for User exp
1/ Discovery: Service discovery can be simplified. Recommend user on what to do across services. At the minimum, we can ask user to configure the discovery of services on the super app, the same way they would on a smartphone home screen. User also doesnt need to install the individual services. They will be in the super app anyway.
MEDIUM impact.
2/ Login mgmt: Single login across services. But not a big deal since if its all google services, then google can enable google login once across separate apps anyway. LOW impact.
Cons for user experience
1/ Needs one more click. Instead of going to smartphone home screen and clicking an app, they now need to open the super app, and then click the service to access the service. This can be tiresome for commonly used services - Youtube, Maps etc. HIGH impact.
2/ Experience can get cluttered. Currently, user can switch across apps in iOS by a simple swipe from bottom. With super app, if they have to switch across services, they will have to click atleast one more icon to get the “home screen” of the super app, and then select the service they want. Its very difficult to combine the expereince across services in the same screen. So this swthicng across services will be needed. High customer friction. HIGH impact.
3/ Size of super app can be become big: With some many services baked in, install size of super app will become large - friction during app install. Also with all these services loaded in the app, the app will become bloated - slow response. Or will need higher end smartphones to work very fast. HIGH impact.
Pros for Google:
1/ Enable service discovery. Can drive adoption by recommending what to do across services. THis would not be possible on iOS natively. Medium impact.
2/ Android OS can get disrupted with someone else builds the super app. For e.g, WeChat disintermediated android in China. Everyone goes to WeChat super app. Not building the super app, can leave scope for disintermediation. But this is not easy to do. Low- Medium impact.
Cons for Google:
1/ Building and managing a super app will be quite cumbersome: Ensuring that the app is not blaoted and runs fast on average hardware, will be very difficult, prompting teams to cut down service specific features and release light weight versions. This can impact user experience.
Overall, will not recommend, since the user experience friction is quite HIGH, and possibility for another super app to evolve is low.
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