http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21620056-search-giant-shares-some-its-business-methods-dont-be-modest
How Google Works. By Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg. Grand
Central Publishing; 286 pages; $30. John Murray; £25. Buy from
Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk

AS A service, Google has become indispensable to people's interactions
online. As a business worth $400 billion after 16 years, its success
has been breathtaking. Yet in terms of management, it has set up
radically different ways of organising itself from those of
traditional businesses. Few people have focused on this.

Now two of Google's architects have analysed what they think worked
and why. Eric Schmidt, the current chairman and former chief executive
(and also a board director of The Economist Group, this newspaper's
parent company), and Jonathan Rosenberg, a former senior manager,
decrypt the firm's methods for other business leaders to learn from.

Most important is thinking extremely big--the "moonshot", as it is
called in Silicon Valley. Google's leaders often have to wrest
employees away from seeking a 10% improvement and towards finding one
that is "10X" (that is, ten times better)--something that requires them
to do things in an entirely new way, not just optimise what already
exists. Most 10X attempts will fail, but that is accepted.

The second insight of the Google method is to "fail fast". That way,
people can learn from failure and move on, perhaps turning some aspect
of the setback into the seedling of a new success. In this respect,
"learning" trumps "knowing", since nobody can foresee the future.
"Iteration is the most important part of the strategy," the authors
advise.

The third element is the primacy of data over experience, intuition or
hierarchy in the making of decisions. Other books have explored
Google's data fetish, for everything from hiring to choosing the shade
of blue in its toolbar, but they have only scratched the surface.
Sadly, "How Google Works" also treats this topic superficially. And it
passes too fast over the way employees measure their output through a
system called OKRs (for "objectives and key results", adapted from
Intel, a chipmaker).

The core of Google's method is the empowering of employees. Bosses at
all firms talk of this, but the search giant takes it to heart. It has
devised systems to enable good ideas from any quarter to get an
airing. Many of Google's biggest products and features (like Gmail)
have emerged from this, and also from a policy that lets staff work on
pet projects for 20% of their time.

Such a culture places huge emphasis on the quality of employees. Among
the authors' best pieces of advice is that companies should ape
academe and form hiring committees to vet candidates and make offers.
This helps eliminate the biases of line-managers and encourages the
staff to think as a team; new hires owe their allegiance to their
peers, not only their supervisors. Unlike firms in most other
industries, Google has to enfranchise its employees: if they feel
stymied, they will simply take their creativity and ambition
elsewhere.

Though it is not discussed in the book, Google's management philosophy
doubtless springs from the careers of the founders, Sergey Brin and
Larry Page. Their youth, vision and technical genius, together with
Google's vast wealth, enabled the company to take risks that others
would never contemplate. This is why it vies to photograph every
street in the world and scan every book ever published, to say nothing
of building self-driving cars and glasses that record almost
everything.

It would have been interesting for this self-examination to have
delved into Google's legal quandaries and the frequent perception that
the firm, contrary to its corporate motto, is a source of evil. One
way to understand the depth of this problem would be to read "When
Google Met WikiLeaks", the transcript of a wide-ranging conversation
that took place in 2011 between Mr Schmidt, his colleagues and Julian
Assange, head of the controversial whistleblowing site. In Mr
Assange's view, expressed in his introduction, Google represents
"technocratic imperialism", a "titanic centralising evil" and "the
death of privacy". Many European officials think likewise, as Google's
regulatory woes attest. Messrs Schmidt and Rosenberg missed an
opportunity by failing to discuss corporate difficulties of this sort.

In large part Google grew because it threw out the traditional MBA
playbook; its success speaks for itself. However, this underscores a
shortcoming of "How Google Works". The experience of Messrs Schmidt
and Rosenberg is so coloured by Google's accomplishments that many of
their recommendations best apply to managing teams of aces in
lucrative, fast-growing markets, not to overseeing a wide range of
talent in low-margin businesses--the life of most managers. Moreover,
the novel advice that the authors offer is occasionally diluted by
banalities such as keeping meetings short, teams small and yes-men
out. Though the authors do not openly boast, the triumphalism becomes
a bit rich: it would be instructive to hear what Google learned from
its biggest foul-ups.

Google's management practices can be usefully incorporated into all
sorts of businesses in all kinds of ways. But most bosses achieve and
retain their positions by safely maintaining an organisation, not
changing it. Few will transform their firms even if they are armed
with the management formula that the book reveals. All the more
reason, then, to celebrate Google's unique achievement.


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU



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