A sharp surge in cloud revenue is forcing a rethink of what defines Google and its parent Alphabet. For the first time in decades, search is no longer the only engine powering the company’s identity.
The shift became clear after Alphabet’s latest quarterly earnings. Google Cloud delivered a standout performance, generating $20 billion in revenue—a 63% jump from the same period last year. Investors responded quickly. Shares climbed 7% in after-hours trading.
Executives, including CEO Sundar Pichai, pointed to artificial intelligence as the main driver behind the surge. Demand for AI-powered tools and infrastructure has soared, and Google Cloud is riding that wave.
The numbers tell a deeper story. Cloud now accounts for 18% of Alphabet’s total business. Just a year ago, it stood at 13.6%. In early 2024, it was even lower at 11.8%. At this pace, cloud could soon represent one-fifth of the company’s revenue, an outcome that seemed unlikely only a few years ago.
Search and advertising still dominate. Google’s ad business brought in $77 billion in just three months, marking a 16% increase year over year. That figure alone surpasses the full-year revenue of American Express in 2025. Search ads remain highly profitable and resilient, supported by YouTube, display ads, and placements across products like Gmail and Maps.
Yet momentum is shifting. Google Cloud is no longer a side project. Its operating income tripled to $6.6 billion, while margins expanded sharply from 9.4% to 32.9%. Those gains signal a business that is scaling fast, and efficiently.
Inside the company, this growth may trigger cultural changes. The cloud division operates differently from Google’s traditional core. It is led by enterprise-focused executives such as Thomas Kurian, a former leader at Oracle. His team emphasizes corporate clients, long-term contracts, and structured sales—far from the engineering-driven culture that built Google’s consumer products.
That contrast could shape future leadership decisions. As Alphabet looks beyond Pichai, the balance between consumer tech and enterprise services may become a defining issue.
AI remains the wildcard. Google Cloud’s backlog has reached $460 billion, reflecting intense demand. If that demand holds, cloud could continue its rapid climb. If it slows, the business may lose momentum just as quickly.
For now, the trajectory is clear. Google is still a search giant—but it is no longer just that.
