Google reportedly has a massive culture problem that's destroying it from the inside

Authored by businessinsider.com and submitted by mvea

Google has been having a rough few years.

In June 2018, its big government contract for Project Maven was scrapped when company executives gave in to internal criticism. Then, in November, employees walked out in protest over allegations of sexual misconduct leveled against top executives. This July, after employees pushed back against a censored version of Google Search being developed for China, the project was revealed to be canceled as well.

As it turns out, all those issues were rooted in Google's culture, according to a massive new investigation by Wired.

Former Android chief Andy Rubin. Getty

The issue with Google's culture is most succinctly summarized in a quote from former Google CEO and Alphabet Chairman Eric Schmidt.

"You need these aberrant geniuses because they're the ones that drive, in most cases, the product excellence," Schmidt told Wired in an interview earlier this year.

One of the so-called geniuses named in the piece was former Android head Andy Rubin, who left Google in 2014 with a $90 million exit package after being accused of coercing a coworker to perform oral sex.

The products in reference here are some of Google's best — products used by billions of people worldwide, such as Gmail, Google Maps, and Google Translate. They're also tremendously important pieces of Google's business.

And that's why Schmidt's statement about aberrant geniuses being allowed more rope than other employees is so important: It's a cultural standard that allows executives to value certain employees so much that even after they are accused of sexual misconduct — and that accusation being considered credible by Google after an investigation — the accused person leaves with a massive bonus and no repercussions.

Google did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

Google employees staged a mass walkout in November. Matt Weinberger/Business Insider

The same cultural standard within Google that encourages frank, open dissent — when paired with Google's famously open internal communications — has also pushed employees into political arguments that have divided the company.

Several conservative former Google employees are suing the company, accusing Google of censoring their political speech and firing them, and one has become a talking point on Fox News. Kevin Cernekee, an engineer, is one of those former employees who say he was fired from Google because of what he alleged was anti-conservative bias.

Read more: Trump goes after Google CEO Sundar Pichai in tweetstorm, says the tech giant is being watched 'very closely'

Based on Cernekee's allegations, President Donald Trump has begun targeting Google and CEO Sundar Pichai in recent weeks. Trump said Pichai was being watched "very closely," and he has accused Pichai of groveling for favor from him in a meeting.

But that's far from the end of Google's recent problems — check out the full piece in Wired right here for a thorough breakdown of the company's problematic past few years.

s_M_e on August 14th, 2019 at 10:11 UTC »

“the only way to deal with all the heads of the medusa is to no-platform all of them.”

This is how I know I belong on reddit;

adjusts glasses, takes a deep calming breath

”um actually it is a hydra you are thinking of, and not a Medusa.”

Vaeon on August 14th, 2019 at 07:44 UTC »

Fuck, this article basically says "Go read the Wired article".

TacoMagic on August 14th, 2019 at 03:08 UTC »

"People at mega-corp not super happy with jobs. Area bars happy with increased sales. Babies who murder? Do you remember where you put your offspring? Stay tuned for news at 10."