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posted by janrinok on Monday August 18 2014, @05:33PM   Printer-friendly
from the bankers-replaced-by-a-toothbrush dept.

When deciding whether Google should spend millions or even billions of dollars in acquiring a new company, its chief executive, Larry Page, asks whether the acquisition passes the toothbrush test: Is it something you will use once or twice a day, and does it make your life better?

The esoteric criterion shuns traditional measures of valuing a company like earnings, discounted cash flow or even sales. Instead, Mr. Page is looking for usefulness above profitability, and long-term potential over near-term financial gain.

Google’s toothbrush test highlights the increasing autonomy of Silicon Valley’s biggest corporate acquirers — and the marginalized role that investment banks are playing in the latest boom in technology deals.

Many of the biggest technology companies are now going it alone when striking large mergers and acquisitions. Companies like Google, Facebook and Cisco Systems are leaning on their internal corporate development teams to identify targets, conduct due diligence and negotiate terms instead of relying on Wall Street bankers.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by fishybell on Monday August 18 2014, @07:23PM

    by fishybell (3156) on Monday August 18 2014, @07:23PM (#82711)

    A lot of things start out with you using it multiple times a day, but later after the shiny factor wears off, your usage of it drops off.

    Dentists love it when you do that.

    Seriously though, that happens because, unlike toothbrushes, you don't have an actual use for the app, no matter how shiny. The number of apps that are in the "wow, this made my life/job/etc. so much better I can't imagine a world without it" is like 3: instant messaging, phone calls, turn-by-turn directions. Two of those things my old phone did perfectly fine.

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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Monday August 18 2014, @07:55PM

    by frojack (1554) Subscriber Badge on Monday August 18 2014, @07:55PM (#82722) Journal

    Looking stuff up, password wallet, and Email. And a distant last place reserved for phone calls.

    I look crap up at the drop of a hat. Web, weather apps, Ok Google, or just web search. Any question comes up and 4 smartphones come out of pockets in this household.
    I suspect I'm not all that different then most people, and retrieving info is the single most frequent activity on a smart phone.

    --
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