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Google+ will get edged out of social world: LinkedIn CEO

LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner raised a few eyebrows Monday when he predicted the demise of Google+, which has been gaining interest and momentum.

On Monday, Weiner, speaking at a Churchill Club event in Santa Clara, Calif., was reportedly asked if there is a limit to the number of social networks that can successfully exist. He said there is a limit and that Google+ will fail in the shadow of Facebook .

“Nobody has any free time,” the Business Insider quoted Weiner as saying. “Unlike social platforms and TV, which can coexist, you don’t see people using Twitter while they’re using Facebook, or using Facebook while they’re using LinkedIn.”

He added that before Google launched field trials of its own social network, Google+, a little more than two weeks ago, the social networking world had a simple set-up. Weiner explained to the audience, according to Business Insider, that people use LinkedIn for their professional lives and Facebook for their family and friends. Twitter is around to send out people’s thoughts to a broad audience.

But now Google+ is upsetting that mix. “You introduce Google+… where am I going to spend that next minute or hour of my discretionary time?” he asked. “I have no more time.”

Weiner’s comments come just days after Google CEO Larry Page announced that Google+ had gained 10 million users in its first two weeks of field trials. The new network is still by invitation only and not officially open. However, that hasn’t stopped Google+ from gaining a lot of attention.

Rob Enderle, an analyst with the Enderle Group, said Weiner’s comments seem more like wishful thinking for the fall of a competitor.

“It’s like saying there’s only room for one search provider or one anything else,” Enderle said. “The market likes a choice. We’re just not to a place where there are too many choices. Even though Facebook has an awful lot of users, I don’t think we can write Google off.”

He said that calling out Google+ at this point seems “foolish.”

“I think a lot of people want Google+ to fail,” Enderle said. “I think there’s a fear that Google+ would absorb what [LinkedIn is] doing. There’s an expectation that people would make their business connections in Circles on Google+ and stop using LinkedIn. There might not be a reason for LinkedIn to exist anymore. He’s just theorizing an outcome that favors him.”

Zeus Kerravala, an analyst with Yankee Group, agreed, noting that users might be more apt to use Facebook and Google+ and simply dump LinkedIn.

“I think this is Weiner whining,” he added. “Google’s biggest strength is that it has Google backing it, so it can appeal to its Google Docs base, its Gmail base and get exposure through its search engine . LinkedIn has none of that.”

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