Google Executives Have a Look but No Touch Rule

December 11, 2015

Have you ever been to a museum and the curator told you to “look, but don’t touch the exhibits?”  The phrase comes into play, because museums want to protect the integrity of the exhibits and to keep them preserved for the ages.  One of the draws about these new, modern companies is that all employees are allowed to engage with each other in different departments and the higher-ups are available without a hassle.  Or at least that is the image they want to project to the public, especially Google.   Business Pundit exposes bow Google CEOs interact with their employees in “Google’ s Top Execs Are Always Visible But Almost Never Approachable” like a museum exhibit.

Larry Page, Sergey Brin, and Sundar Pichai make themselves seen at their Mountain View headquarters, but do not even think about going near them.  They are walled off to small talk and random interactions because all of their time is booked.

Company developer advocate Don Dodge wrote on a Quora Q&A that Larry Page, Sergey Brin, and Sundar Pichai are in the no approach zone, Dodge explains:

“However, that doesn’t mean they are easy to approach and engage in discussion. They are very private and don’t engage in small talk. They are usually very focused on their priorities, and their schedule is always fully booked. Larry is a notoriously fast walker and avoids eye contact with anyone so he can get to his destination without disruption.”

Get Larry a Segway or one of those new “hoverboard” toys, then he will be able to zoom right past everyone or run them over.  Add a little horn to warn people to get out of the way.

Whitney Grace, December 11, 2015
Sponsored by ArnoldIT.com, publisher of the CyberOSINT monograph

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