Team Members Manendra Shukla
Google’s transcendent and seemingly human qualities give it special appeal to an amazingly wide range of computer users, from experts to novices, who trust the brand that has become an extension of their brains.That appeal is universal, enabling it to overcome differences in culture,language,and geography en route to become a global favourite. So why not  G o o g l e …???  Why Google…???
Introduction
How did it Begin….??? “ In spring 1995, Larry Page and Sergey Brin first met at a social outing in San Francisco designed to welcome new applicants to Stanford Doctoral Program” Despite of their differences and not initially working together, they became friends and were quickly known as  “Larry-and-Sergey” Introduction
Introduction Larry Page Co-Founder & President, Products Sergey Brin Co-Founder & President, Technology
Subsequently, LarryPage met Garcia-Molina, Brin’s adviser in his office one day in 1995 to show him a neat trick he had discovered. The AltaVista search engine could show what other sites linked to them but did not exploit this link information; Page suggested it would be a good way to rank sites . Introduction
The PageRank system, invented by Larry Page (and  named after him) judges a site’s importance  by analyzing  outside links to it. Brin, on the other hand,worked on ways to find specific word combinations  that often occurred  together on the Internet. Introduction
Later, Page combined his method of analyzing back-links pointing to a given website with Brin’s web crawler, and their combined research gave birth to a new search engine called G o o g l e Introduction
in 1996, Brin and Page disclosed the technology to Stanford OTL . After two years, while continually completing an increasing number of searches, In March 98, surprisingly Page and Brin tried to sell the engine to Alta Vista for $1M but DEC (Altavista’s mother company) was not “very open to outside technology” and hence the deal was not a success . Introduction
Yahoo’s founder, D. Filothen advised them to take a leave of absence from their PhD and to focus more upon their own business. In October 1998, Page and Brin convinced a friend to rent a Garage and spare room for $1700/month. They quickly added 8 phone lines, a cable modem and a DSL line.  After two months, they were only 8 people. Introduction
… and finally to the GooglePlex  in 2003 Introduction
… now 66 GooglePlexes  all over the world Introduction
Introduction Dato Amanullah Patrick Pichette Sergey Brin Farid Shahrouz David Drummer David Girouard Urs Hozle Larry Page Alan Eustace Omid Kordesta Dennis Woodside Michelle Lee Organizational Structure at Google
G o o g l e ’s Mission Introduction To Organize the  world's information  and  make it  universally   accessible  and  useful
How Google Works
What’s  Google? How Google Works "Googol" is the mathematical term for a 1 followed by 100 zeros. The term was coined by Milton Sirotta, nephew of American mathematician Edward Kasner, and was popularized in the book, "Mathematics and the Imagination" by Kasner and James Newman.  Google's play on the term reflects the company's mission to organize the immense amount of information available on the web.  Google, it is a combination of scientific skills, and mathematical skills, and computer skills, and also very strong skills about how to get people excited about their work."
Two 300-megahertz (MHz) Dual Pentium II servers with 512 megabytes (MB) of memory A four-processor F50 IBM RS6000 computer with 512 MB of memory  A dual-processor Sun Ultra II computer with 256 MB of memory  Several hard drives (some of which were housed in a box covered in LEGO bricks) ranging from 4 to 9 gigabytes (GB) for a total of more than 350 GB of storage space  Today, Google uses hundreds of thousands of servers to provide services to its users How Google Works Back in 1998  google’s  equipment was  relatively modest. The equipments at that  time included :
How Google Works P a g e R a n k ™ Algorithm H y p e r t e x t - m a t c h i n g  Analysis C l o u d  Computing
. A Web page's PageRank depends on a few factors: The frequency and location of keywords within the Web page :  If the keyword only appears once within the body of a page, it will receive a low score for that keyword.  How long the Web page has existed :  People create new Web pages every day, and not all of them stick around for long. Google places more value on pages with an established history.  The number of other Web pages that link to the page in question :  Google looks at how many Web pages link to a particular site to determine its relevance .  How Google Works
SERP Search Engine Results Page(s).  The page or pages that are displayed after entering a query into a search engine . How Google Works
PageRank™  How Google Works PageRank aka PR is one of the methods Google uses to determine the relevance or importance of a Web page.  The PageRank of a page A is given as follows: PR(A) = (1-d) + d (PR(T1)/C(T1) + ... + PR(Tn)/C(Tn))  PageRank is a vote, by all the other Web pages on the Internet, about how important a Web page is. A link to a Web page counts as a vote of support. If there are no incoming links to a Web page then there is no support.
High level Google Architecture How Google Works
Marketing
A d S e n s e & A d W o r d s Marketing
AdWords   is  G o o g l e 's flagship advertising product and main source of revenue. Google's total advertising revenues were USD$23 billion in 2009.  AdWords offers pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, and site-targeted advertising for both text, banner, and rich-media ads. G o o g l e 's text advertisements are short, consisting of one headline and two additional text lines. Marketing
Marketing
AdSense  is an ad serving application run by  G o o g l e  Inc.  Website owners can enroll in this program to enable text, image, and video advertisements on their websites.  These advertisements are administered by  G o o g l e  and generate revenue on either a per-click or per-impression basis. Marketing
Marketing
7 p   s in a Google way Marketing
Marketing Search. Ads. Apps. Product
Marketing
Marketing
And a lot more… Marketing
Price G o o g l e  take special consideration at the different parts involved in setting its prices. Item such as list price, discounts, allowances, payment periods and credit terms are items that work together to set the price of its merchandise. Marketing
Place G o o g l e ’s place is the internet. When it comes to Google and trying to target their consumers, the people on the Internet,  no one does it better. Marketing
Promotion G o o g l e ’s convenient service and precise search results have made it one of the world’s best-known brands and search engines almost completely through word of mouth from satisfied users. Marketing
People People working behind  G o o g l e  innovated several methods to make our web-life simplified. Marketing
Physical Evidence G o o g l e  uses visual metaphores to give a feel of their service to their service users. Marketing
Process G o o g l e  has innovated several mechanism to make their process Fast & Simplified. Marketing
Marketing Language Availability
G o o g l e ’s Positioning something that "understands exactly what you mean and gives you back exactly what you want" Marketing
Marketing Speed Accuracy Objectivity Ease of use Less Popup Less Spam Huge Storage Differentiation
Marketing Yahoo! Search Altavista Ask MSN Search Bing Major Competitors
Marketing Market Share
Marketing BCG Growth-share Matrix Market growth rate Relative market share High Low High Low Google Me Android Plateform Google Search Google Catalog Internet Apps
S W O T Marketing
Strengths The speed and simplicity of its search engine is quite reliable and user friendly. It gets reputation by its popularity which proceeds by its word of mouth publicity, so it doesn’t need to put much effort in marketing its search engine. Seemingly open minded and modern executive management Marketing
Immensely loyal and satisfied employees It has a low operation cost regarding its products It provides its search engine interface to 88 languages which is quite helpful for the locals of the countries. It directly routes its users to the webpage without lingering on another site for ad. Revenue. Marketing
Weaknesses Many spammers manipulate Google’s ranking technology by creating dummy sites with thousands of links to pages that they wanted Google to rank highly. Although Google is a dominating player among search engine websites, only 50% to 65% of web search queries are answered accurately by it. Its link-based ranking tech. mostly didn’t work on actual traffic analysis. There is the risk of facing dead ends for the users, who find the citation but not the whole text. It is dependent mostly on its search based advertising. Marketing
Opportunities It can add localized vendors paid advertisements on the localized search. Browsers and search sites targeted toward specific markets such as children with protections or senior citizens with limited computer knowledge and visual impairments Development of artificial intelligence products  Development of new hardware solutions for server architecture Marketing
Threats There is no long time entry barrier in this business. Many competitors can emerge in coming years with same services, better interface and names and can catch up Google’s market. Google can get trapped in issues regarding privacy if it decides to go for highly personalized search for which It has to capture user’s personal information. Continued insistence by some foreign governments to censor the information  It can lose its simple and user-friendly interface if it decides to become a portal, for which it is favorite among its users Marketing
Acquisitions 77 acquisitions till date Marketing
Finance
Finance Income Statement (Annual Data)  all figures are in thousand $
Finance Analysis of Google’s Income Statement
Finance   Values in Millions $
Finance   Values in Millions $
Finance
Finance   Values in Millions $
Finance Balance Sheet (Annual Data)  all figures are in thousand $
Finance all figures are in thousand $
Analysis on  the specifics of Google’s Balance Sheet Finance
Finance
Finance Net Working Capital all figures are in thousand $
Finance GOOGLE RATIO
Finance
Finance Capital surplus all figures are in thousand $
Finance all figures are in thousand $
Finance Cash Flow Statement (Annual Data)  all figures are in thousand $
Finance Cash from Operations & Financing all figures are in thousand $
Human Resource
Human Resource GOOGLE’S RECRUITMENT POLICY Google's recruitment process is based largely on a series of interviews with a series of different interviewers. Through a range of interview topics from programming questions to general logic puzzles to personality checks, in order to see how skilled and intelligent a person is.
Human Resource GOOGLE’S WORK CULTURE In the  Google lobby, there in no typical office environment and in some lobbies a piano waits for a skilled musician. Google hires people that embody  their company's values and  feel  the same intense. The  employees  work  towards  the same goals rather than compete against one another.  Almost everyone cherishes  to have meal in the office café .
Human Resource commitment to innovation depends on everyone being comfortable sharing ideas and opinions.  Every employee is a hands-on contributor, and everyone wears several hats because every Googler is expected to be an equal part of the success of the company.   Employees can personalize their workstations as much as they like, and even bring dogs (but not cats) to work if they want to.
Human Resource SEVERAL ON-CAMPUS BENEFITS Short list of the perks includes On-site hair cut free of charge A total equipped Gym Swim-in-place swimming pools Various indoor facilities including video games. On-site dry cleaning services. On-site medical staff.
Human Resource Previlege of utilising 20 percent of their work week(one full day) to pursue special projects. Google's culture promotes the use of fresh, organic foods and healthy meals Google serves up more than 200 recipes in their cafeterias everyday. Also provides electric scooters for better accessibility around the cafeterias.
Human Resource Here are a few things you might see in a Google workspace Bicycles or scooters for efficient travel between meetings; dogs; lava lamps; massage chairs; large inflatable balls.  Laptops everywhere – standard issue for mobile coding, email on the go and note-taking.  Football, pool tables, volleyball courts, assorted video games, pianos, ping pong tables, and gyms that offer yoga and dance classes.  Grassroots employee groups for all interests, like meditation, film, wine tasting and salsa dancing.
Human Resource Comparative Analysis of Revenue Earned by the Employees The average Google employee generates more than $1 million in revenue each year.  This metric is a good indicator of how an organization leverages its workforce. Yahoo currently produces just $564,000 per employee, and Microsoft $647,000.
Human Resource Training and Development Process Rather than emphasizing traditional training, the development effort is decentralized. Development leaders at Google state that "training courses are a tiny piece of what we do." As an organization, Google can shift the burden of learning to employees because it focuses on hiring individuals who already demonstrate a love for  self-directed learning.
Human Resource Team building at Google Team goals are developed through a group process. Participation is actively shown by all team members  Feedback is asked form all members Conflict is not suppressed. Team members are allowed to express negative feelings and confrontation within the team which is managed and dealt with by team members.  When mistakes are made, they are treated as a source of learning rather than reasons for punishment.
Human Resource CSR ACTIVITIES DONE BY GOOGLE Google has been firmly committed to active philanthropy and to addressing the global challenges of climate change, education and poverty alleviation. Google also jump-started a series of social initiatives in China on May 12th, 2008,in a earthquake that struck Western China, claiming the lives of tens of thousands.
Human Resource Google grants is an in-kind donation program awarding free AdWords advertising to select charitable organizations. Since its inception, they have supported hundreds of organizations in advocating and promoting their causes, from animal rights and literacy to abandoned children and HIV education.
Human Resource Help monitary benefits to State-level Poverty Counties  like Shaanxi Province Googlers  also held camps for voluntary blood donations
Human Resource Top 10 Reasons to Work at Google Lend a helping hand.  With millions of visitors every month, Google has become an essential part of everyday life – like a good friend – connecting people with the information they need to live great lives.  Life is beautiful there. Appreciation is the best motivation ,they have created a fun and inspiring workspace you’ll be glad to be a part of as many facilities are available there. Work and play are not mutually exclusive We love our employees, and we want them to know it.  Google offers a variety of benefits, including a choice of medical programs, company-matched 401(k), stock options, maternity and paternity leave, and much more.
Human Resource Innovation is their bloodline. .They see endless opportunity to create even more relevant, more useful, and faster products for there users. Good company everywhere you look.  Googlers range from former neurosurgeons, CEOs, and U.S. puzzle champions to alligator wrestlers and Marines. No matter what their backgrounds, Googlers make for interesting cube mates.  Uniting the world, one user at a time.  People in every country and every language use their products. As such they think, act, and work globally – just our little contribution to making the world a better place.  Boldly go where no one has gone before.  Here they provide the opportunity to develop innovative new products that millions of people will find useful.  There is such a thing as a free lunch after all:  every day they have: healthy, yummy,lunch and made with love.
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
Human Resource
T h a n k  Y o u

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Google- manendra

  • 2. Google’s transcendent and seemingly human qualities give it special appeal to an amazingly wide range of computer users, from experts to novices, who trust the brand that has become an extension of their brains.That appeal is universal, enabling it to overcome differences in culture,language,and geography en route to become a global favourite. So why not G o o g l e …??? Why Google…???
  • 4. How did it Begin….??? “ In spring 1995, Larry Page and Sergey Brin first met at a social outing in San Francisco designed to welcome new applicants to Stanford Doctoral Program” Despite of their differences and not initially working together, they became friends and were quickly known as “Larry-and-Sergey” Introduction
  • 5. Introduction Larry Page Co-Founder & President, Products Sergey Brin Co-Founder & President, Technology
  • 6. Subsequently, LarryPage met Garcia-Molina, Brin’s adviser in his office one day in 1995 to show him a neat trick he had discovered. The AltaVista search engine could show what other sites linked to them but did not exploit this link information; Page suggested it would be a good way to rank sites . Introduction
  • 7. The PageRank system, invented by Larry Page (and named after him) judges a site’s importance by analyzing outside links to it. Brin, on the other hand,worked on ways to find specific word combinations that often occurred together on the Internet. Introduction
  • 8. Later, Page combined his method of analyzing back-links pointing to a given website with Brin’s web crawler, and their combined research gave birth to a new search engine called G o o g l e Introduction
  • 9. in 1996, Brin and Page disclosed the technology to Stanford OTL . After two years, while continually completing an increasing number of searches, In March 98, surprisingly Page and Brin tried to sell the engine to Alta Vista for $1M but DEC (Altavista’s mother company) was not “very open to outside technology” and hence the deal was not a success . Introduction
  • 10. Yahoo’s founder, D. Filothen advised them to take a leave of absence from their PhD and to focus more upon their own business. In October 1998, Page and Brin convinced a friend to rent a Garage and spare room for $1700/month. They quickly added 8 phone lines, a cable modem and a DSL line. After two months, they were only 8 people. Introduction
  • 11. … and finally to the GooglePlex in 2003 Introduction
  • 12. … now 66 GooglePlexes all over the world Introduction
  • 13. Introduction Dato Amanullah Patrick Pichette Sergey Brin Farid Shahrouz David Drummer David Girouard Urs Hozle Larry Page Alan Eustace Omid Kordesta Dennis Woodside Michelle Lee Organizational Structure at Google
  • 14. G o o g l e ’s Mission Introduction To Organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful
  • 16. What’s Google? How Google Works "Googol" is the mathematical term for a 1 followed by 100 zeros. The term was coined by Milton Sirotta, nephew of American mathematician Edward Kasner, and was popularized in the book, "Mathematics and the Imagination" by Kasner and James Newman. Google's play on the term reflects the company's mission to organize the immense amount of information available on the web. Google, it is a combination of scientific skills, and mathematical skills, and computer skills, and also very strong skills about how to get people excited about their work."
  • 17. Two 300-megahertz (MHz) Dual Pentium II servers with 512 megabytes (MB) of memory A four-processor F50 IBM RS6000 computer with 512 MB of memory A dual-processor Sun Ultra II computer with 256 MB of memory Several hard drives (some of which were housed in a box covered in LEGO bricks) ranging from 4 to 9 gigabytes (GB) for a total of more than 350 GB of storage space Today, Google uses hundreds of thousands of servers to provide services to its users How Google Works Back in 1998 google’s equipment was relatively modest. The equipments at that time included :
  • 18. How Google Works P a g e R a n k ™ Algorithm H y p e r t e x t - m a t c h i n g Analysis C l o u d Computing
  • 19. . A Web page's PageRank depends on a few factors: The frequency and location of keywords within the Web page : If the keyword only appears once within the body of a page, it will receive a low score for that keyword. How long the Web page has existed : People create new Web pages every day, and not all of them stick around for long. Google places more value on pages with an established history. The number of other Web pages that link to the page in question : Google looks at how many Web pages link to a particular site to determine its relevance . How Google Works
  • 20. SERP Search Engine Results Page(s). The page or pages that are displayed after entering a query into a search engine . How Google Works
  • 21. PageRank™ How Google Works PageRank aka PR is one of the methods Google uses to determine the relevance or importance of a Web page. The PageRank of a page A is given as follows: PR(A) = (1-d) + d (PR(T1)/C(T1) + ... + PR(Tn)/C(Tn)) PageRank is a vote, by all the other Web pages on the Internet, about how important a Web page is. A link to a Web page counts as a vote of support. If there are no incoming links to a Web page then there is no support.
  • 22. High level Google Architecture How Google Works
  • 24. A d S e n s e & A d W o r d s Marketing
  • 25. AdWords is G o o g l e 's flagship advertising product and main source of revenue. Google's total advertising revenues were USD$23 billion in 2009. AdWords offers pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, and site-targeted advertising for both text, banner, and rich-media ads. G o o g l e 's text advertisements are short, consisting of one headline and two additional text lines. Marketing
  • 27. AdSense is an ad serving application run by G o o g l e Inc. Website owners can enroll in this program to enable text, image, and video advertisements on their websites. These advertisements are administered by G o o g l e and generate revenue on either a per-click or per-impression basis. Marketing
  • 29. 7 p s in a Google way Marketing
  • 30. Marketing Search. Ads. Apps. Product
  • 33. And a lot more… Marketing
  • 34. Price G o o g l e take special consideration at the different parts involved in setting its prices. Item such as list price, discounts, allowances, payment periods and credit terms are items that work together to set the price of its merchandise. Marketing
  • 35. Place G o o g l e ’s place is the internet. When it comes to Google and trying to target their consumers, the people on the Internet, no one does it better. Marketing
  • 36. Promotion G o o g l e ’s convenient service and precise search results have made it one of the world’s best-known brands and search engines almost completely through word of mouth from satisfied users. Marketing
  • 37. People People working behind G o o g l e innovated several methods to make our web-life simplified. Marketing
  • 38. Physical Evidence G o o g l e uses visual metaphores to give a feel of their service to their service users. Marketing
  • 39. Process G o o g l e has innovated several mechanism to make their process Fast & Simplified. Marketing
  • 41. G o o g l e ’s Positioning something that "understands exactly what you mean and gives you back exactly what you want" Marketing
  • 42. Marketing Speed Accuracy Objectivity Ease of use Less Popup Less Spam Huge Storage Differentiation
  • 43. Marketing Yahoo! Search Altavista Ask MSN Search Bing Major Competitors
  • 45. Marketing BCG Growth-share Matrix Market growth rate Relative market share High Low High Low Google Me Android Plateform Google Search Google Catalog Internet Apps
  • 46. S W O T Marketing
  • 47. Strengths The speed and simplicity of its search engine is quite reliable and user friendly. It gets reputation by its popularity which proceeds by its word of mouth publicity, so it doesn’t need to put much effort in marketing its search engine. Seemingly open minded and modern executive management Marketing
  • 48. Immensely loyal and satisfied employees It has a low operation cost regarding its products It provides its search engine interface to 88 languages which is quite helpful for the locals of the countries. It directly routes its users to the webpage without lingering on another site for ad. Revenue. Marketing
  • 49. Weaknesses Many spammers manipulate Google’s ranking technology by creating dummy sites with thousands of links to pages that they wanted Google to rank highly. Although Google is a dominating player among search engine websites, only 50% to 65% of web search queries are answered accurately by it. Its link-based ranking tech. mostly didn’t work on actual traffic analysis. There is the risk of facing dead ends for the users, who find the citation but not the whole text. It is dependent mostly on its search based advertising. Marketing
  • 50. Opportunities It can add localized vendors paid advertisements on the localized search. Browsers and search sites targeted toward specific markets such as children with protections or senior citizens with limited computer knowledge and visual impairments Development of artificial intelligence products Development of new hardware solutions for server architecture Marketing
  • 51. Threats There is no long time entry barrier in this business. Many competitors can emerge in coming years with same services, better interface and names and can catch up Google’s market. Google can get trapped in issues regarding privacy if it decides to go for highly personalized search for which It has to capture user’s personal information. Continued insistence by some foreign governments to censor the information It can lose its simple and user-friendly interface if it decides to become a portal, for which it is favorite among its users Marketing
  • 52. Acquisitions 77 acquisitions till date Marketing
  • 54. Finance Income Statement (Annual Data) all figures are in thousand $
  • 55. Finance Analysis of Google’s Income Statement
  • 56. Finance Values in Millions $
  • 57. Finance Values in Millions $
  • 59. Finance Values in Millions $
  • 60. Finance Balance Sheet (Annual Data) all figures are in thousand $
  • 61. Finance all figures are in thousand $
  • 62. Analysis on the specifics of Google’s Balance Sheet Finance
  • 64. Finance Net Working Capital all figures are in thousand $
  • 67. Finance Capital surplus all figures are in thousand $
  • 68. Finance all figures are in thousand $
  • 69. Finance Cash Flow Statement (Annual Data) all figures are in thousand $
  • 70. Finance Cash from Operations & Financing all figures are in thousand $
  • 72. Human Resource GOOGLE’S RECRUITMENT POLICY Google's recruitment process is based largely on a series of interviews with a series of different interviewers. Through a range of interview topics from programming questions to general logic puzzles to personality checks, in order to see how skilled and intelligent a person is.
  • 73. Human Resource GOOGLE’S WORK CULTURE In the Google lobby, there in no typical office environment and in some lobbies a piano waits for a skilled musician. Google hires people that embody their company's values and feel the same intense. The employees work towards the same goals rather than compete against one another. Almost everyone cherishes to have meal in the office café .
  • 74. Human Resource commitment to innovation depends on everyone being comfortable sharing ideas and opinions. Every employee is a hands-on contributor, and everyone wears several hats because every Googler is expected to be an equal part of the success of the company. Employees can personalize their workstations as much as they like, and even bring dogs (but not cats) to work if they want to.
  • 75. Human Resource SEVERAL ON-CAMPUS BENEFITS Short list of the perks includes On-site hair cut free of charge A total equipped Gym Swim-in-place swimming pools Various indoor facilities including video games. On-site dry cleaning services. On-site medical staff.
  • 76. Human Resource Previlege of utilising 20 percent of their work week(one full day) to pursue special projects. Google's culture promotes the use of fresh, organic foods and healthy meals Google serves up more than 200 recipes in their cafeterias everyday. Also provides electric scooters for better accessibility around the cafeterias.
  • 77. Human Resource Here are a few things you might see in a Google workspace Bicycles or scooters for efficient travel between meetings; dogs; lava lamps; massage chairs; large inflatable balls. Laptops everywhere – standard issue for mobile coding, email on the go and note-taking. Football, pool tables, volleyball courts, assorted video games, pianos, ping pong tables, and gyms that offer yoga and dance classes. Grassroots employee groups for all interests, like meditation, film, wine tasting and salsa dancing.
  • 78. Human Resource Comparative Analysis of Revenue Earned by the Employees The average Google employee generates more than $1 million in revenue each year.  This metric is a good indicator of how an organization leverages its workforce. Yahoo currently produces just $564,000 per employee, and Microsoft $647,000.
  • 79. Human Resource Training and Development Process Rather than emphasizing traditional training, the development effort is decentralized. Development leaders at Google state that "training courses are a tiny piece of what we do." As an organization, Google can shift the burden of learning to employees because it focuses on hiring individuals who already demonstrate a love for self-directed learning.
  • 80. Human Resource Team building at Google Team goals are developed through a group process. Participation is actively shown by all team members Feedback is asked form all members Conflict is not suppressed. Team members are allowed to express negative feelings and confrontation within the team which is managed and dealt with by team members. When mistakes are made, they are treated as a source of learning rather than reasons for punishment.
  • 81. Human Resource CSR ACTIVITIES DONE BY GOOGLE Google has been firmly committed to active philanthropy and to addressing the global challenges of climate change, education and poverty alleviation. Google also jump-started a series of social initiatives in China on May 12th, 2008,in a earthquake that struck Western China, claiming the lives of tens of thousands.
  • 82. Human Resource Google grants is an in-kind donation program awarding free AdWords advertising to select charitable organizations. Since its inception, they have supported hundreds of organizations in advocating and promoting their causes, from animal rights and literacy to abandoned children and HIV education.
  • 83. Human Resource Help monitary benefits to State-level Poverty Counties like Shaanxi Province Googlers also held camps for voluntary blood donations
  • 84. Human Resource Top 10 Reasons to Work at Google Lend a helping hand. With millions of visitors every month, Google has become an essential part of everyday life – like a good friend – connecting people with the information they need to live great lives. Life is beautiful there. Appreciation is the best motivation ,they have created a fun and inspiring workspace you’ll be glad to be a part of as many facilities are available there. Work and play are not mutually exclusive We love our employees, and we want them to know it. Google offers a variety of benefits, including a choice of medical programs, company-matched 401(k), stock options, maternity and paternity leave, and much more.
  • 85. Human Resource Innovation is their bloodline. .They see endless opportunity to create even more relevant, more useful, and faster products for there users. Good company everywhere you look. Googlers range from former neurosurgeons, CEOs, and U.S. puzzle champions to alligator wrestlers and Marines. No matter what their backgrounds, Googlers make for interesting cube mates. Uniting the world, one user at a time. People in every country and every language use their products. As such they think, act, and work globally – just our little contribution to making the world a better place. Boldly go where no one has gone before. Here they provide the opportunity to develop innovative new products that millions of people will find useful. There is such a thing as a free lunch after all: every day they have: healthy, yummy,lunch and made with love.
  • 97. T h a n k Y o u