Fact Check

I Want to Work at Google

Photographs show amenities provided to employees at the offices of Google.

Published Aug. 26, 2008

Claim:

Claim:   Photographs show amenities provided to employees at the offices of Google.

Status:   True.

Example:   [Collected via e-mail, June 2008]


































We already knew that working for Google had certain advantages, but, believe me, this giant of the search motor takes the welfare of its employees seriously, as shown by this decompression (stress) capsule that is impermeable to sound and light.

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Moving around: A slide allows quick access from different floors. There are also poles available similar to the ones used in fire stations.

Click to enlargeInnovation: Large boards are available just about everywhere because 'ideas don't always come when seated in the office' says one of Google's managers.

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Food: Employees can eat all they want from a vast choice of food and drink.

Click to enlargeWork Station: Each employee has at least two large screens. There are 4-6 'Zooglers' per office.

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Leisure: Pool tables, video games, etc., are available in many areas.

Click to enlargeCommunication: On each floor, there are private cabin areas where employees can attend to personal affairs.

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Technical Support: Problem with your computer? No problem — bring it to this area where drinks are available while it is being fixed.

Click to enlargeHealth: Professional masseurs (maseusses) available.

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Rest: This room provides massage chairs that you control while you view relaxing aquariums!

Click to enlargeAmbiance: There are many books in this library — even some about programming!



Origins:   In recent years employers seeking to attract and retain top-notch personnel have begun providing workplaces tailored to their employees' convenience and lifestyles, offering such amenities as facilities for day care, exercise and recreation, on-site health care, pets at work, etc. Internet behemoth Google is one company famous for providing its workforce with a wide variety of amenities (in its Mountain View, California, headquarters and in other Google offices around the world) in order to bring in talented employees and keeping them working longer and harder:



Free cafeteria food, annual ski trips to the Sierra and free laundry are just some of the fringe benefits of working at Google. Getting hired is the trick.

Every month, aspiring workers deluge the popular Mountain View search engine with up to 150,000 resumes, equivalent to a stack of paper at least 50 feet high. And the firm claims to read each and every one.

As one of Silicon Valley's hottest companies, Google has become a beacon for job seekers. In just a few short years, the interest has helped the company amass an arsenal of what is arguably among the world's top technology minds.

To lure workers, Google offers perks, including free cafeteria meals, free use of laundry machines, a child care center, a free annual one-night ski trip (resort destinations vary depending on office location), dog-friendly offices and an on-site doctor. Engineers can devote 20 percent of their time to projects of their choice. What's not mentioned is that much of the largesse is designed to keep workers at their desks longer.


The above-displayed photographs represent some of the amenities available to employees at the offices of Google's European Engineering Center in Zurich, Switzerland:



If your ideal workspace includes a slide, a games room, a 'chill-out' aquarium and plenty of free food then you had better get your CV into Google.

Dotcom companies were defined by beanbags and pizza but Google,

a company that came to prominence after the bubble had burst, has taken that image to a whole new level.

Meeting 'pods' in the style of Swiss chalets and igloos, fireman poles to allow easy access between floors and a slide to ensure that people can get to the cafeteria as quickly as possible are all part of a design of its new European engineering headquarters in Zurich Switzerland.

The building was designed for — and partly by — the 300 engineers who will work there.

The wacky office is both a showcase for Google's unconventional approach to business and a symbol to prove that Google is no longer a US-centric firm.

Engineers work in small teams of three or four, which is reflected at the Zurich HQ with small offices, each of which comes with the requisite 'bean bag' meeting room.

Whiteboards are everywhere, allowing ideas to be written down wherever they are thought up and there is a heavy emphasis on the idea that work and play can co-exist.

Other areas include a games room, a library in the style of an English country house and an aquarium where over-worked Googlers can lie in a bath full of red foam and stare at fish.


Additional views of Google's Zurich offices can be viewed in the photo galleries here and here, as well as in the following video clips:

Last updated:   26 August 2008





  Sources Sources:

    Corcoran, Elizabeth.   "Follow the Talent."

    Forbes.   15 January 2007.

    Kopytoff, Verne.   "How Google Woos the Best and Brightest."

    San Francisco Chronicle.   18 December 2005.

    Mclellan, Wendy.   "Google Targeting Talent with Innovative, Creative Qualities."

    canada.com.   28 July 2008.

    Wakefield, Jane.   "Google Your Way to a Wacky Office."

    BBC News.   13 March 2008.


David Mikkelson founded the site now known as snopes.com back in 1994.