Google is a US company that has decided to pursue operations overseas and would present an excellent case study in deciding whether a company can benefit from international business.
Google was founded by two University of Stanford graduate students Larry Page and Sergey Brin. Their main objective of founding the company was to be able to retrieve specific data from massive amounts of information. The two developed a proprietary technology that would become the ultimate search engine. Initially the pair worked out of their dorm room, then a garage, and once they had quickly outgrown these "facilities" they had moved on to a much larger facility where they reside to this day. It seemed to be a matter of time before they had conquered the continental United States, and had begun to eye the lands across the pond.
As the internet increases its grasp on foreign markets, it was a natural progression for one of the most successful companies to be born from the internet to expand its operations into these fledgling countries. While the internet usage in foreign markets such as Japan, Europe, and China are just beginning to take shape, the number of new internet users in these markets is expanding at a much greater rate than in the United States.
Google, which generates almost all of its revenue from advertising sales, have focused their attentions to these markets with unlimited potential. Google executives anticipate as its presence in foreign countries expands so will the growth of the company and eventually the bottom line. Some of the latest data on Google's financial status is that it receives a little less than two-thirds of all revenue domestically. This da ...