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Why the Google layoffs are about personal ambition and poor leadership

Andy Walker
8 min readJan 24, 2023

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How did the company that aspired to be so much more come to this?

Photo by Kai Wenzel on Unsplash

Recently, Google announced it was laying off approximately 6% of its workforce (or 12,000 people). This brings it in line with most of the rest of the tech industry. The reason given by a publicly contrite CEO was that they’d overhired in the boom following the COVID pandemic and that now they had to address it but they were oh-so-sorry and took full responsibility. Like many others my first reaction to this rationale was “bullshit”. I imagine the same is true for the people at Meta, Amazon, Microsoft et al going through this. I spent 10 years at Google so I have some views on how these things come about and they don’t reflect well on the people running the company.

Before getting into that it’s worth noting that all publicly listed companies operate under a fiduciary duty to act for the benefit of their shareholders. This has been enshrined since the (in)famous case of Dodge vs Ford Motor Company (1919). The backstory there was that Henry Ford wanted to reduce payments to shareholders on the basis of being able to offer cheaper cars to his customers and better wages to his staff. At the time Ford said.

My ambition is to employ still more men, to spread the benefits of this industrial system to the greatest possible number, to help them build up their lives and their homes. To do this we are putting the greatest share of our profits back in the business.

The Dodge brothers owned 10% of Ford and opposed this and took Ford to court because they wanted the payments to be able to start their own company. They won and Ford was not allowed to lower prices or raise salaries at the company. It’s worth understanding that if you have a sufficiently vocal group of shareholders with the resources to take you to court then you have to be able to show you are acting in their best interests. Shareholders have primacy in terms of a company’s priorities. This almost enshrines seeking short term profit over longer term thinking by giving activist investors a stick to threaten you with.

This stands at the heart of the current situations being faced by companies like Google today. There are institional investors with the means to take them to court and these…

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Andy Walker
Andy Walker

Written by Andy Walker

Interested in solving complex problems without complexity and self sustaining self improving organisations.

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