this post was submitted on 06 Mar 2024
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Windows Phone, Windows Mobile, Family Room, Zune, Expression. When products don't create enough revenue they get axed.
While absolutely true, Google has a reputation and history of killing off huge swaths of projects widely adopted by end users, even if they were theoretically profitable.
That's not always true.
There are a few reasons as to why one would keep low/no profit or even completely unprofitable projects going.
It's all tied to their value proposition. For example, if you can sustain a no profit project, it will bring you new customers despite creating no revenue. A glaring example of high-value yet unprofitable product would be Twitch, all because it brings in data.