Google's
Head Of HR Shares His Hiring Secrets
Google's
SVP of people operations explains how he sifts through 2 million resumes and
how he defines the Googleyness of potential hires.
Laszlo Bock knew he wasn’t walking into a traditional
corporate setting in 2006 when he arrived for his job interview for head of
people operations at Google.
Google
recruiter Martha Josephson implored Bock, who had done stints at firms
like GE and McKinsey & Co., not to wear a suit to his interview. No one
wears suits there, she told him—show up in one, and they'll think you don't get
them or their culture. Bock acquiesced, but kept a necktie in his jacket pocket
just in case.
He
got the job, in addition to something rare: an extraordinary perch from which
to watch and eventually exert some influence over how a fast-moving web company with plenty of money to spend and people to
study conducts itself and maintains its idiosyncratic culture. That's partly
why he's written the book Work Rules, which comes out this month. The
book aims to give a peek inside why Google organizes itself the way it does,
the motivations behind its approach to recruiting—and what more-traditional
businesses can learn from its approaches.
We
give our people tremendous freedom. We use science to figure out what makes
teams work.
Such
discussions about the company tend to eventually make their way to its perks,
like free gourmet food and fitness classes, the
typical envy-inducing stuff of similarly sized tech names in the Valley. Ask
Bock what's special about a company famous for cataloging the world's
information and for projects reminiscent of sci-fi films like self-driving
cars, though, and he has a ready answer: "It's our people," he
insists in an interview with Fast Company, acknowledging that it's the
kind of answer that can sound a little corny. But it's also a reference to how
intensely the company focuses on the hiring process—choosing people well and
reaping the rewards from its selectivity.
"We
actually did a survey once where we talked to the first 100 people hired at
Google and asked them what made the place special, and one of the top two
reasons everybody said was the quality of the people," he continued.
"Another thing that’s special about the company: We give our people
tremendous freedom. And we underpin our people practices with real science and
data. We use science to figure out what makes teams work."
Shifting Through 2 Million Résumés
It's
no secret the company is incredibly choosy with who it picks to become
"Googlers." Bock says the company gets more than 2 million
applications every year, a flood of correspondence that also includes the
occasional oddity.
Bock
has received T-shirts with résumés silk-screened on them. He’s also gotten
sneakers from someone who "wanted to get their foot in the door." The
company also has tried a few left-of-center approaches itself to deal with the
crush of applications and interest from prospective hires, like the time in
2004 it ran a billboard in Massachusetts and off the 101 Freeway in California
with a cryptic puzzle on it.
Hiring
only several thousand of the 2 million applicants makes Google 25 times more
selective than Harvard, Yale, or Princeton.
The
company hoped some curious and enterprising computer scientists out there would
see it and be able to solve it, and Google would have thus hit upon an
innovative way of adding new talent to its ranks. Google didn’t actually hire
anyone as a result of the billboard, but Bock says the company’s records show
at least 25 current Googlers mentioned seeing it and thinking it was a fun
promotion.
Considering And
Reconsidering
Hiring
only several thousand of the 2 million applicants makes Google 25 times more
selective than Harvard, Yale, or Princeton, explains Bock, who was born in 1972 in
Communist Romania, and says the idea of joining a company founded with the goal
of making information available to everyone "was thrilling."
It’s
the mission, in other words, that drew him in. Since he joined, the company has
grown from 6,000 employees to 60,000. And even though sifting through all those
applications may sound like a tall order, it’s still not like those moments you
hear about in the book industry, where every now and then an author will get
lucky after her manuscript happens to land on the desk of an agent who reads it
and champions it all the way to publication.
Google,
Bock says, has actually built a sophisticated infrastructure that results in
every application getting consideration—and the company even has a team to
review applicants who’ve been rejected from the regular process, just to give a
second look in case someone potentially valuable has been missed.
Freedom Is Free
Bock
recalls once giving a talk in Chicago to a group of local chief human resources
officers about the culture at Google. After the presentation, one of the
attendees stood and replied, a bit skeptically, about what he’d just heard,
saying it was all well and good for Google, but that it has huge profit
margins, and can afford to pay up to treat people well: "We can’t all do
that."
Bock
was about to explain that most of what Google does along these lines—like
giving employees the freedom to carve out a percentage of their time to pursue
whatever they want—doesn’t actually cost anything. Even in a time of flat
wages, he was preparing to explain, you can focus on making your people happy;
indeed, that when the economy is at its worst, treating people well matters
most.
Before
he could respond, someone else shot back: "What do you mean? Freedom is
free. Any of us can do this."
"We
put a lot of time and effort to work at Google into making this a place where
you can be who you are," Bock says. "We’ll even have protests on
campus where Googlers are making a statement about political things in the
world they think are wrong."
Defining
"Googleyness"
He
says Google looks for four attributes it’s figured out will predict whether
someone can be successful at the company. They include general cognitive
ability—no surprise there, as the company wants the best and brightest—as well
as leadership ability, role-related knowledge, and "Googleyness."
About
that last one, Google tries not to look for people who "look like
us," Bock said. Rather, the intent is to find someone different, offbeat,
who can push and challenge the status quo.
About
the recruitment of women and minorities, he concedes the company still needs to
do better. A report last year found that just 17% of the company’s technology staff is female, but Bock says the company is
planning to publish its diversity numbers again this summer and expects
"they’ll show a modest improvement."
Some
of the other ways Google distinguishes its hiring and workplace culture:
The
company actually has a chief culture officer, Stacy Sullivan, charged with
making sure "Google’s culture stays true to itself." She built a
network of "culture clubs" and teams of local volunteers charged with
maintaining the company’s culture in each of its 70-plus offices around the
world.
Bock’s
Work Rules principles include:
- "Trust your people."
- "Hire only people who are
better than you."
- "Don’t confuse development
with managing performance."
It’s
probably no surprise his favorite video game of all time is 1999’s PC game Planescape:
Torment. In it, your character starts the game by awaking in a mortuary
with no memory. The rest of the game is spent discovering how in your past
lives you’ve done "great good and great evil," waking up after each
life with a blank slate and a fresh opportunity to again choose how to live.
At
a key point in the game, Bock explains, you’re confronted with the question:
What can change the nature of a man?
Similarly,
Bock finds himself constantly thinking about what can change the nature of a
company and its people—for better and for worse.
"Even
if you join a company fresh out of school, as a junior employee or as employee
number 1,000,006, you can still be a founder by choosing how you interact with
those around you, how you design your workspace, and how you lead," Bock
writes. "In doing so, you’ll help create a place that will attract the
most talented people on the planet."
By Andy
Meek
http://www.fastcompany.com/3044606/hit-the-ground-running/googles-head-of-hr-shares-his-hiring-secrets?utm_source=mailchimp&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=fast-company-weekly-newsletter&position=1&partner=newsletter&campaign_date
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