- According to a report from CNBC, Google employees are aggressively pursuing executives over pay.
- In April, Alphabet reported impressive first-quarter profits that beat analyst expectations.
- One employee claimed to have noticed a “huge drop in morale.”
Google executives are facing tough questions from employees after the company reported explosive earnings last month.
In April, Alphabet reported strong first-quarter profits This exceeded analysts’ expectations, and the stock price soared.The company reported approximately 15% year-over-year revenue growth and its first Dividend is 20 cents per share.
CNBC reported that Google employees wanted to know why increased revenue didn’t translate into higher pay or an end to some of the company’s cost-cutting measures.
One comment posted on an internal forum before the meeting claimed there had been a “significant drop in morale, increased distrust, and a disconnect between leadership and employees.”
Another top question seen by CNBC was why Google employees didn’t receive “significant compensation increases” despite “the company’s impressive performance and record revenues.”
In an all-hands meeting with Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai and other executives, Google’s CFO Ruth Porat reportedly responded to some of the employee comments. It is said that he mentioned. He said the company’s priority is “investing in growth,” and “revenues should grow faster than expenses,” the report said.
Pichai reportedly went on to joke that he would host a “Finance 101” TED Talk for employees.
A Google spokesperson told Business Insider that most employees will receive raises this year, including raises, stock grants and full bonuses.
The spokesperson added that Google is investing responsibly in the company’s biggest priorities, and this means continuing to hire in critical roles across the company.
Google executives have endured tough questioning and employee criticism over the last year.
The company cut approximately 12,000 jobs. Thousands more people will be laid off from core engineering and hardware teams in 2023, starting in 2024.
The rolling layoffs have angered employees, some of whom have lashed out at management. After a series of layoffs in January, some Googlers publicly targeted what they described as a “bespectacled leader.” Organized protests took place in response..
According to CNBC, Pichai told employees during the all-hands meeting that the company had hired too many employees during the pandemic.
“We hired a lot of people and we’ve been able to pivot from there,” he said.
On February 28, Axel Springer, the parent company of Business Insider, joined 31 other media groups in filing a $2.3 billion lawsuit against Google in Dutch court, alleging losses caused by the company’s advertising practices. I woke you up.