Anyone purchasing tech stocks of social media or search firms should read this book to understand the industry.
The strength of the book involves the 360 view of a company, from
management, employees, and the board. Such a broad perspective is rare in most
management books. As a manager, I gain insight into some of the practices of a
company that contains a diverse workforce that demands excellence from those
workers, and provides a culture that nourishes achievement. As an employee, I
could extract the expectations of a very successful and innovative company and
what that company looks for in its employees. Finally, as a member of a board,
the book clearly delineates the role of board members and that of management. That
the authors both teach at Stanford Business School allow readers to
"attend" a course for the price of the book or a library card.
The book divides into eight chapters, Introduction--Lessons learned from the
front row, Culture--Believe Your own Slogans, Strategy--Your plan is wrong,
Talent--Hiring is the most important thing you do, Decisions--The true meaning
of consensus, Communications--Be a damn good router, Innovation--Create the
primordial ooze, and Conclusion--Imaging the unimaginable. These titles sound
life ones that you would find in any management book, but the secret sauce is
the details and the reliance on data and statistics to support the conclusions
that the authors draw.
Upper management creates and determines company culture. Fitting the
stereotype of a high tech firm, Google promotes a flat, democratic, adaptive,
experimental, and open organizational environment. Things the founders and
employees care about and value. Operating on a platform of the internet,
management faces these realities: "First, the Internet has made
information free, copious, and ubiquitous . . . Second, mobile devices and
networks have made global reach and continuous connectivity widely available. A
third, cloud computing has put practically infinite computing power and storage
and a host of sophisticated tools and applications at everyone's disposal, on
an inexpensive, pay-as-you-go basis" (p. 11). Faced with these
forces, Google built a firm full of people the authors label as "smart
creative", individuals that differ from the now prevalent,
one-dimensional "knowledge workers" because "they are
multidimensional, usually combining technical depth with business savvy and
creative flair" (p. 17). To keep their workforce networked, Google
crowds employees together in close working quarters, tolerates messiness,
ignores rank and prizes data, turns the Rule of Seven on its head, and organizes
groups functionally and not according to business divisions and product lines
to avoid silos.
In the management sphere, the authors discuss strategy, talent, decision
making, communication, and innovation. Regarding strategy, the authors take an
iterative approach to a company plan, "based on a foundational set of
principles that are grounded in how things work today and that guide you plan
as it shape-shifts its way to success. The plan is fluid, the foundation
stable" (p. 69). The plan rests on technical observations and not on
marketing research. Who would have thought Google would innovate the car
industry? The book contains Eric Schmidt's format for successful strategy
meeting that is worth reading. On the topic of talent and hiring, the authors
acknowledge that building a great company entails finding excellent
people--the responsibility of not only management but the entire organization.
The authors present advise on career-building as well as hiring tips. On the
topic of decision making, the authors stress management timing
as well as the rightness, the data supporting, of a
decision. Management enables communication to flow--not information
hoarders, but information routers. Finally, the sum total of the organization
and culture creates a medium where innovation happens.
As an employee, the book offers guidance on the expectations in the world of
"smart creatives". The sections of the book on "Google's Hiring
Dos and Don'ts . . . Career--Choose the F-16, Treat your career like you are
surfing, and Always listen for those who get technology, Plan your career,
Statistics is the new plastics, Know your elevator pitch, Go abroad, and
Combine passion with contribution" are all worth reading.
Finally, as a member of a board that has had its attention diverted from
strategy and product to governance and lawsuits, I found Google's caveat
interesting--"If this isn't true, get new board members" (p. 195). A
lack of focus erodes business momentum and distracts leadership and strategic
thinking.
Schmidt, E. & Rosenberg, J. (2014). How Google Works. New York: Grand
Central Publishing.
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