Google Doubles Down on Enterprise by Re-Branding Its Cloud
Welcome to Google Cloud and G Suite.
If there’s one thing that drives Google’s head cloud chief Diane Greene bananas, it’s the idea that the search giant is not serious about becoming a big business technology provider.
Since joining Google last fall, Greene, speaking Thursday at a press event in San Francisco, said she’s talked to over 200 customers and partners about Google’s various enterprise services, from its work document tools to its cloud computing business in which companies can buy computing capacity on demand.
Greene said that Google GOOG -0.84% would “blow customers away” with the amount of tools and services they have to sell. Yet after each discussion, the companies would inevitably ask “Is Google really serious about the enterprise?”
Get Data Sheet, Fortune’s technology newsletter.
“It was kind of driving ourselves crazy,” Greene joked to the crowd of reporters, analysts, and business representatives.
Of course, Google has long tried to make a healthy business selling workplace software services like spreadsheets and email to companies. Although those services are popular, most people still consider Google to primarily be an Internet search and advertising company.
Greene wants to change that perception and part of that has to do with a re-branding, which technology news siteThe Information reported in September was in the works.
Now, Google will group together its business apps like Gmail and Calendar under the brand name G Suite, replacing the Google Apps for Work branding. G Suite will also fall under the overarching Google Cloud branding, which is an umbrella term that covers all of the search giant’s various business services like its data analytics tools, Chromebook laptops and Android phones, and cloud computing business.
“When we said this to everybody at Google, there was no question,” Greene said about the rebranding. “Everyone feels that we are Google Cloud.”