Key Takeaways
- Google Cloud revenue hit $15 billion in Q3, growing 34% year-on-year
- Now challenging YouTube as Alphabet’s second-largest revenue source
- Market share increased from 7% to 13% under CEO Thomas Kurian
- AI infrastructure demand and custom chips driving massive growth
Google Cloud has transformed from a money-losing division into Alphabet’s fastest-growing business, powered by surging AI demand and strategic investments. The cloud unit reported $15 billion in third-quarter revenue, marking a 34% year-on-year increase as it now competes with YouTube for the position of Alphabet’s second-largest revenue generator.
From Laggard to Leader
Once considered a weak spot in Alphabet’s portfolio, Google Cloud has emerged as a critical growth engine. CEO Sundar Pichai identified this shift, stating: “Google Cloud is one of the most important priorities for Alphabet as a whole, and I expect it to play an even more central role as the company moves forward.”
Much of this transformation stems from leadership changes. Former Oracle executive Thomas Kurian, who took over in 2018, has driven Google Cloud’s market share from 7% to 13% according to Synergy Research Group.
Pichai’s Strategic Vision
When Pichai became CEO in 2019, he pinpointed YouTube and Google Cloud as his two major bets to diversify beyond advertising. While YouTube quickly became the world’s largest video platform, Google Cloud struggled initially, losing billions between 2018 and 2022 before finally turning profitable in 2023.
The generative AI revolution has created new opportunities for Google Cloud to challenge market leaders Microsoft and Amazon, which control approximately 20% and 30% of the cloud market respectively.
“This is the moment Google Cloud was waiting for,” noted Dave McCarthy, research director at IDC. “A lot of the future growth at Alphabet is being looked at through its potential.”
Cultural Transformation
Google Cloud’s turnaround involved significant cultural changes. Executives described a shift to customer-driven sales models, tighter financial discipline, and increased collaboration with rivals.
Kurian implemented cost-cutting measures by establishing offices in lower-cost locations like North Carolina and Poland. He also renegotiated internal contracts and restructured sales strategies to focus on industries rather than geographies, replacing Google’s experimental culture with what insiders called an “un-Googley” emphasis on execution.
Chip Strategy Pays Off
A crucial turning point came in 2022 when Kurian convinced Pichai to transfer Google’s TPU (Tensor Processing Unit) chip business to cloud division control. This strategic move enabled Google Cloud to offer Alphabet’s AI chips directly to customers—including competitors.
“We are the only hyperscaler with both silicon and models of our own,” Kurian emphasized to Reuters. The strategy has proven successful, with nine of the ten leading AI labs—including OpenAI, Anthropic, and Safe Superintelligence—now using Google Cloud.
The chip business delivered major wins in 2024 when Anthropic expanded its Google deal to deploy up to one million TPUs, representing tens of billions in value as companies seek alternatives to Nvidia hardware. Other major AI developers, including Apple, have since followed this path.



