David Seidler
Jul 6, 2011

Blogger and Picasa to take on the family name

GLOBAL - Google is to retire its Picasa and Blogger brand names in an effort to streamline identification of the company’s social media offerings.

Picasa (left) and Blogger are set to become Google Photos and Google Blogs respectively
Picasa (left) and Blogger are set to become Google Photos and Google Blogs respectively

Industry website Mashable cited “two sources familiar with the matter” to report that the networks would be relaunching as ‘Google photos’ and ‘Google blogs’ in the next four to six weeks.

The move comes in anticipation of the public debut of Google+, the search giant’s answer to the increasing popularity of social media tools like Facebook and Twitter. Both Photos and Blogs could ultimately be integrated in to that networking platform.

The rebranding and reunification effort is thought to be a specific plan of Google founder and new CEO Larry Page. It follows the successful rebranding of its Grand Central acquisition to become Google Voice.

Google+ launched in closed beta testing last week and is slated for a July 31 public release.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

41 minutes ago

McCann, Famous Innovations lead the charge at South ...

Also imparting a memorable mark: FCB Kinnect, Havas Media India, OMD, and White Rivers Media with their impressive wins showcasing gold, glory, and game-changing creativity.

5 hours ago

Can retail media compensate for weaknesses in ...

Following reports on declines in performance media earnings, Campaign explores what strategies marketers can employ to navigate this changing landscape—including the promise of retail media.

6 hours ago

Guardian Malaysia wants you to 'own your beautiful' ...

The health and beauty retailer's latest initiative, developed with FCB Shout, challenges traditional notions of beauty.

7 hours ago

Woolley Marketing: An agency village can be the ...

Every marketing ecosystem has its weak link. Darren Woolley explains how to spot—and avoid becoming—the "village idiot" before your agency network collapses under its own weight.