Ask Kitty is where we answer your questions about AI. Today’s question was submitted by @iamjasonlevin and was voted on in last week’s newsletter.
Looking for information on
Perplexity? You’re not the only one. Just look at Google results for “perplexity” over the last year.
Image: Google Trends
If Perplexity isn’t familiar to you yet, don’t worry. The search startup was only founded in 2022 and its growth has been rapid in the last year. Perplexity raked in
52.4 million visits in March 2024 (across 10 million users), up 2.2 million visits from December 2022. The 55-person startup became a unicorn just last month (April 2024) after raising $63M, valuing the company at more than $1 billion. Recent backers include Daniel Gross (Founder/Investor), Garry Tan (YC), and Dylan Field (Figma) not to mention early investment from Jeff Bezos and Nvidia.
Another reason you might not have heard of Perplexity until recently is simply that its top competitors are household names, namely Google and ChatGPT. And it’s hard to stand out as a search tool when that’s the case. The former has a brand name that is literally equitable to search (“google it”) and the latter (OpenAI) is far more capitalized, even as a startup, with $11.3B in funding and Microsoft at its side.
What Perplexity does differently: The “answer engine”
So,
Perplexity may be an underdog, but it’s playing the job well.
First of all, the founders have a lot of experience that combines know-how across various markets. CEO
Aravind Srinivas worked as a research scientist at OpenAI, President
Andy Konwinski previously co-founded Databricks, and CTO
Denis Yarats was an engineer at Quora along with CSO
Johnny Ho — and that’s only touching on the key points of each founder’s accomplishments.
The team has not shied away from taking on Google, with its bark or its bite (the product). Let’s tackle the product stuff first.
Perplexity positions itself as an “answer engine,” not a “search engine”. The term refers to how Perplexity responds to your question with detailed answers. Unlike Google, you don’t have to dig through links to find an answer to your query (and wonder if you’ve been manipulated by ads or optimized content) – you’re given an answer in easy-to-understand sentences. That sounds like ChatGPT, but unlike ChatGPT, you aren’t just left with a paragraph of text and no way to tell if the answer is legit. Perplexity provides sources with its answers. You can check the work or dig in more directly yourself, or you can chat back to the bot to keep getting more answers. This part, and the ability to revisit past queries, is also similar to ChatGPT.
Why Google will be hard to beat
Despite Srinivas’s comments, Google’s announcements still caused plenty of people to
speculate that Perplexity won’t be able to cut it. Despite any die-hard fans (like the
Shopify CEO), many users either find themselves switching back and forth between engines for different queries or
jumping from one platform to another as new features are released.
Most of the skepticism around Perplexity’s longevity points back to one overarching point: Google’s got data. From maps to reviews, Google’s ecosystem is so large now that it will be hard to beat. For example, I searched “best gluten-free pizza by me” and Google’s results gave me everything from Reddit searches to map searches, including the results of a gluten-free app that uses Google’s tech. While messy, the end results were pretty good – I recognized the top-notch joints. Even when I gave Perplexity a zip code, I got sketchy Yelp results with places I’ve never heard of. Given the thought that Google’s AI updates and
filters will presumably make this experience even better, I’ll keep going to Google for searches like this for the time being, but will be trying out Perplexity for less “brainstormy” or opinions-based questions.
Why Google isn’t a sure bet either
You could say that Google is between a rock and a hard place thanks to AI. Google can’t be just an answer engine like Perplexity or even ChatGPT. Answers like that don’t generate ad revenue. Right now, it feels like Google’s only play is that eclectic array of search results that Srinivas was making fun of.
Personally, as a content person, I think it’s still possible for Google to find a good mix of search & answers that will satisfy most users. Still, it’s a tall order. I’ll leave you with this rundown of why that impressive roster of investors backed
Perplexity in the first place, and you can decide for yourself.