Industry


Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Preston Gralla's picture
Preston Gralla

Seeing Through Windows

Why Google has lost its mojo

Google went from startup to behemoth in record time. But there are increasing signs that Google has become just another fat, happy, and even arrogant company, no longer the lean, industry-changing giant of the past. And that spells good news for Microsoft.

There are numerous signs that Google has lost its mojo. Let's start with the way it treats its employees. Google has prided itself on the many perks it offers those who work for it. The pact has always been clear: Google will treat you like a king, if you in turn work long, hard hours. That free food, after all, is fuel for those willing to work harder and longer hours.


Have you seen:
Google is doing WHAT?

An eye-opening article in the New York Times, though, shows those days are gone. In it, Joe Nocera details how Google has decided to nearly double the cost of day care for its employees, who have complained bitterly about the change.

The story reveals a surprisingly high level of arrogance. It claims the following happened at a company meeting:

In June, the Google co-founder Sergey Brin said he had no sympathy for the parents, and that he was tired of "Googlers" who felt entitled to perks like "bottled water and M&Ms."

A Google spokesman denies that it ever happened, of course.

This is far from an isolated instance. There are many other similar signs as well, notably numerous Google employees heading for the exits, with unpleasant tales to tell. Most telling of all is Sergey Solyanik, who recently left Google for, of all places, Microsoft, where he had previously worked. In his blog, here's one thing he notes about the atmosphere at Google:

There are plenty of silly politics, underperformance, inefficiencies and ineffectiveness, and things that are plain stupid.

Instead of focusing on them, though, he talks about the actual engineering work and the underlying business plan, and he's not impressed:

I was using Google software - a lot of it - in the last year, and slick as it is, there's just too much of it that is regularly broken. It seems like every week 10% of all the features are broken in one or the other browser. And it's a different 10% every week - the old bugs are getting fixed, the new ones introduced. This across Blogger, Gmail, Google Docs, Maps, and more.

Ultimately, he believes, Google business practices are not sustainable, because the focus is on engineering and the "coolness" factor, rather than on services that people will actually find useful:

The culture at Google values "coolness" tremendously, and the quality of service not as much.

There are plenty of other Googlers who have left as well. There's the blogger who calls himself the Digital Hobbit, who said that he left Google in large part because the company had simply gotten too big.

Another troubling sign: Google stock has plummeted. Back in November, it was at $744. Today, as I write this, it's at $546 --- a precipitous drop. The entire stock market has gone down, you say? So what? In the past, Google has defied market gravity. If it's now tied to the movement of the market itself, its salad days are gone.

The New York Times article concluded that the daycare debacle is a microcosm of what's happening at Google in general. I think its conclusion sums up the problem best:

Google has shown that it thinks about day care the same way every other company does — as a luxury, not a benefit. Judging by what’s transpired, that’s what Google is fast becoming: just another company.

So why is all this good for Microsoft? First off, there's a chance it can pick up talent from Google, as the defection of Sergey Solyanik has shown. Beyond that, though, if Google's best days are gone, it gives Microsoft more time to figure out how to finally take advantage of the Internet, something it has yet to figure out.

Like this blog? Subscribe to the RSS feed!

What People Are Saying

Mojo (pronounced

Mojo (pronounced /ˈmoʊdʒoʊ/) is a term commonly encountered in the African-American folk belief called hoodoo.

Same scenario at most companies

Who hasn't worked for a dysfunctional company? Nothing new here. All big companies are dysfunctional. Google
hasn't made any mistakes that companies I've worked for haven't made. And they are still in business.

And so what if Google is cutting perks? Google employees got passes to golf courses. rec facilities, great work hours and great health insurance. Economies are not doing too well now. Get the picture? Google is trying to reduce expenditures like everyone else.

As a long time IT professional, I have no sympathy for the Google kids. They had more bennies than most IT professionals in the last 15 years.

Thank-you Preston for reminding us that a few spoiled children who worked for Google were sucked into Microsoft. But you know as well as I that Google sucked your talent pool dry 10 years ago.

Well.................

I don't think that google will fall to microsoft within 2 years or whatever. MS killed win xp!!!! Go google down with MS.

Google is more of a Myth than a Company

It ran on being trendy, but really most of what Google has tried to appeal to mainstream users, like Froogle and Answers and Checkout and Video have failed badly. And a lot of Google's inhouse projects are of interest to no one but a small fanbase.

Google has been evil all along and like every other company, it's seeing the collapse of its myth.

Google Mojo?

Preston, calm down. So a few Google employees have went to MS. In at least one of the instances you cite, it was a former MS employee who was merely returning to MS. (And complaining about ENGINEERING of all things running the show! Oh the horror! Send in more managers!!!). The Ballmer CTI (Chair Throwing Index) still point overwhelmingly to Google poaching MS talent, not the other way around.

And even if Google does loose momentum and stumble in the next few years, the "mojo" doesn't automatically flow back to Redmond (if indeed it ever was there). Some other young hungry startup will grab it and run with it. The mojo will never belong to Microsoft. If Google is getting too big and arrogant, they are still mere posers compared to Microsoft. The architects of Vista are incapable of picking up the torch.

I don't know who the next leader of tech will be after Google, I just know who it will not be.

Again with the Microsoft!

Yes, of course... in the end it's always about Microsoft. You work for them, right?