| Google's Organizational Culture |  | 
ICMR HOME | Case Studies Collection
 Case Details:
 
 Case Code : HROB041
 Case Length : 11 Pages
 Period : 1996 - 2004
 Pub Date : 2004
 Teaching Note : Available
 Organization : Google Inc.
 Industry : IT
 Countries : USA
 
 To download Google's Organizational Culture case study 
(Case Code: HROB041) click on the button  below, and select the case from the list of available cases:
 
 
  
 Price:
 For delivery in electronic format: Rs. 300;
 For delivery through courier (within India): Rs. 300 + Rs. 25 for Shipping & Handling Charges
 
 
 
 » Human Resource and Organization Behavior Case Studies» HRM Short Case Studies
 » View Detailed Pricing Info
 » How To Order This Case
 » Business Case Studies
 » Area Specific Case Studies
 » Industry Wise Case Studies
 » Company Wise Case Studies
 
 
   
 
 
Please note:
 This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.
 
 
 
 Chat with us
 
 
  
 Please leave your feedback
 
 
   | 
		
| 
	       
 << Previous ExcerptsGoogle's Organizational Culture
	
		| 
Google had an informal work culture at Googleplex (its headquarters). Both Larry 
and Sergey wanted to make Google a fun place to work. Reflecting their beliefs, 
the Googleplex was decorated with Lava Lamps and painted in the bright colors of 
the Google Logo (Refer Figure I for Google Logo).
 Googlers were allowed to bring their pets in to the workplace, and were 
themselves provided with free snacks, lunch and dinner prepared by a celebrity 
chef Charlie Ayers. The Googleplex had snack rooms offering Googlers cereals, 
gummi bears, cashew nuts and other snacks along with fruit juices, soda and 
cappuccino...
 |   
 |  Recruitment
	Sergey and Larry also focused on recruiting people with the right frame of 
	mind. They were themselves personally involved in the recruitment process. 
	In order to attract high performing candidates, Google posted top ten 
	reasons to work for Google on its website (Refer Table II).
 Google recruited people with diverse skills and qualities (Refer Table III). 
	While recruiting, Google attached a lot of importance to academic excellence 
	as revealed in grade scores in SAT and other graduate exams. To get an 
	interview call from Google, a person had to be from a top-ranking 
	university...
 
	
		|  | Innovations at Google
			Google management also focused on encouraging innovation and 
			creativity at the workplace. It realized that to maintain its 
			growth, the company had to come out with new products/features. 
			However, the company faced problems on how to tap ideas that could 
			be turned into successful products. Said Silverstein, "We always had 
			great ideas, but we didn't have a good way of expressing them or 
			capturing them." To overcome the problem, Google set up an internal 
			web page for tracking new ideas... |  A Critique of Google's Culture
Many analysts feel that Google's zero per cent employee turnover rate during the 
dotcom boom, was a testament to its salubrious organizational culture. But not 
everyone was convinced that Google had got it right in terms of its work 
culture. They felt that company's culture was not set to manage its growth. A 
12-hour working day had become norm at the company. Google's recruitment process 
was also criticized by analysts.
 It was pointed out that Google had become too narrow in its recruitment by 
focusing only on the academic records and graduate ranks of the applicants 
rather than on experience. Commenting on the recruitment process, one Googler 
said, "If you've been at Cisco for 20 years, they don't want you." But the 
management defended the recruitment process saying that they valued intelligence 
and brainpower more than experience...
 
 Exhibits
Exhibit I: Google FeaturesExhibit II: Awards & Recognitions Won by Google
 
 |  |