Google Cloud’s ‘Strong’ Q1 Growth And Sundar Pichai’s Vision: 5 Big Takeaways

From Google Cloud’s 44 percent sales spike and operating loss to Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai’s boldest cloud statements, CRN breaks down the five most important Google Cloud takeaways from Alphabet’s first quarter 2022 earnings results.

Google Cloud’s Earnings Highlights: Sales Increase, Stock Drop, Pichai’s Cloud Vision

Google Cloud was a bright spot for its parent companies Google and Alphabet during its first quarter 2022, with Google Cloud sales soaring 44 percent year over year to $5.82 billion.

Sundar Pichai, CEO of Alphabet and Google, touted the “strong performance across Google Cloud Platform and Workspace” while also providing his vision for the cloud giant’s future during his company’s first quarter 2022 financial earnings report.

Mountain View, Calif.-based Alphabet generated approximately $68 billion in total sales across the search giant’s various businesses, representing an increase of 23 percent year over year.

Google Cloud sales jumped from $4.05 billion in first quarter 2021 to more than $5.82 billion year over year.

“Our Q1 saw strong growth in Search and Cloud, in particular, which are both helping people and businesses as the digital transformation continues,” said Pichai, during the company’s earnings call with media and analysts. “We’ll keep investing in great products and services, and creating opportunities for partners and local communities around the world.”

[Related: SADA CEO Tony Safoian: How Google Cloud Is Besting AWS]

Google Cloud sales include Google’s infrastructure and platform services, collaboration tools and enterprise customer services. Google Cloud generates revenues from fees received from its flagship Google Cloud Platform (GCP) services, Google Workspace collaboration tools, and other various cloud services.

From Google Cloud’s operating loss to the most significant statements made by Alphabet’s CEO Pichai about the cloud giant’s future during the earnings call with media and analysts, CRN breaks down the five most important things Google Cloud channel partners, investors and customers should know.

Sundar Pichai’s Vision And Growth Strategy For Google Cloud In 2022

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai walked through the next leg of growth strategy for Google Cloud and what’s motivating him the most for the rest of the year.

“Overall across the board, I’m excited because there’s a lot of product innovation across the key areas: be it data and analytics, cybersecurity, our open multi-cloud, as well as Google Workspace. So when I look at the innovation in the product pipeline and the overall demand we are seeing and how early our journey is, there’s definitely a lot to look forward to,” said Pichai.

Pichai highlighted cybersecurity as a particular focus for the company.

“We obviously are excited about our acquisition of Mandiant, which I think will help us serve customers deeper as well. But overall, the execution has been great. We are scaling up, particularly in our go-to-market as well,” he said. “And I think that will play out well.”

In March, Google unveiled its plan to purchase incident response standout Mandiant for $5.4 billion. Mandiant will bring Google real-time and in-depth threat intelligence gained from working with the largest organizations in the world on the frontlines of cybersecurity.

Overall, Pichai said Google Cloud will focus on “converting bookings to consumption.”

“I think it will play out well, taking a long-run view and methodically scaling up and executing better,” he said. “So that’s what I’m excited about.”

Google Cloud Reports $931M Operating Loss

Although Google Cloud sales jumped 44 percent in the first quarter, the cloud giant continues to run on an operating loss.

Google Cloud reported an operating loss of $931 million for its first quarter 2022. However, this represents a $43 million improvement compared to Google Cloud’s operating loss of $974 million during first quarter 2021.

Ruth Porat, Alphabet and Google’s chief financial officer, said the company is spending billions on capex investments such as the company’s $9.5 billion investment in data centers and offices. She also said Google Cloud will continue to spend big on hiring.

“We continue to invest aggressively in cloud given the opportunities we see,” said Porat. “We continue to make considerable investments in capex, R&D and talent to support long-term value creation for all stakeholders.”

Alphabet reported it had approximately 164,000 employees worldwide during the first quarter 2022, up from around 140,000 employees in first quarter 2021.

This month, Google unveiled plans to invest $9.5 billion in data centers and U.S. offices that will create at least 12,000 new full-time jobs by the end of 2022.

Google Cloud Accounts For 8.6 Percent Of Alphabet’s Sales

As Google Cloud continues to grow sales at a high double-digit clip, the cloud computing giant is capturing a larger portion of Alphabet’s overall revenue.

In the first quarter of 2022, Google Cloud sales of $5.82 billion accounted for approximately 8.6 percent of Alphabet’s total revenue.

Comparatively, in first quarter 2021, Google Cloud’s sales of $4.05 billion accounted for 7.3 percent of the Alphabet’s total revenue.

If a similar sales growth pace continues, Google Cloud will represent around 10 percent of Alphabet’s total revenue by first quarter 2023.

“On cloud, Q1 revenue grew 44 percent year over year with continued strong performance across Google Cloud Platform and Workspace,” said Pichai. “We’ll keep investing in great products and services, and creating opportunities for partners and local communities around the world.”

Sundar Pichai: Google Cloud’s ‘ Differentiated’ Security Solutions

There are several areas where Pichai said Google Cloud provides “differentiated products” which is driving market expansion and sales growth.

A significant area is in security, where Pichai touted new offerings including virtual machine (VM) threat detection, agentless malware detection capabilities, and advanced intrusion detection systems for networks.

“Our leading threat detection and response platform, Chronicle, is now paired with Simplified to more quickly automate incident detection and resolution,” said Pichai. “We also announced our intent to acquire Mandiant, a leader in dynamic cyber defense and response, to help protect customers from the most advanced threats.”

Another market differentiator is Google Cloud’s “open secure infrastructure” to enable customers to run their workloads and applications where their needed, according to the CEO.

“This is winning global brands like Dun & Bradstreet, Boeing, and Kyocera. Our product leadership continued with the release of Tau VMs, which powers price performance that’s more than 40 percent better than any other leading cloud,” said Pichai.

“Leading companies like Mahindra are choosing us for large-scale IT transformations and migrating their data centers to Google Cloud, while Sony’s Crunchyroll uses our infrastructure and networking capabilities to power the largest anime streaming service in the world,” said Pichai.

Alphabet Stock Drops 4.5 Percent

Although Google Cloud sales surged 44 percent, Alphabet’s stock was down 4.5 percent as of Wednesday morning, trading at $2,263.54 per share.

Google Cloud revenue of $5.82 billion beat Wall Street’s expectation of $5.73 billion for the quarter.

However, Alphabet’s earnings per share was $24.62 per share for the first quarter, failing to meet Wall Street’s expectations of $25.91 per share.

Additionally, YouTube advertising revenue missed analyst expectations of $7.21 billion in the first quarter by reporting only $6.87 billion in YouTube advertising sales. The company’s overall revenue of $68.01 billion was slightly less than Wall Street’s expectations of $68.11 billion. Finally, the company’s

Over the past month, Alphabet’s stock is down nearly 20 percent, compared to $2,829.11 per share on March 28. Alphabet’s stock is roughly flat compared to April 2021.