HANYANG UNIVERSITY DIVISION: BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION INSTRUCTOR: PROF. SEONG-JIN CHOI HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL CASE: Google Inc. (Abridged) 2nd case report Fall Semester 2013 Seoul‚ 10th September 2013 submitted by: Karl Rempel Asternweg 5 67551 Worms +49 160 990 100 78 karl.rempel@fh-worms.de student-id: 9100420130 Summary The Harvard Business Case “Google Inc. (Abridged)” from December 14 th 2010‚ written by Benjamin Edelman and Thomas R. Eisenmann‚ describes Google’s history
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Summary of Google SWOT analysis Strengths Opportunities • Google is number one search engine and has established a brand name‚ in which its users trust. • It’s dependable‚ reliable and fast. • Google has low operation cost as it uses low cost UNIX web servers for indexing millions of web pages across internet • Very little end user marketing is needed as the name itself is getting word by mouth publicity. • The Google interface is simple and it gives comprehensive results without confusing
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The rise of Google‚ now a $6.1 billion company‚ has been fast and fierce. Founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page met in 1995 as Stanford University graduate students. They created a search engine that combined the technologies of Page’s PageRank system‚ which evaluates a page’s importance based on the external links to it‚ and Brin’s Web crawler‚ which visits Web sites and records a summary of their content. Because Google was so effective‚ it quickly became the search engine of choice for Web users
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Google has a unique approach to everything that it does and its approach to Human Resources Management is no exception. “Ranked by Fortune Magazine as the best of the 100 best companies to work for‚” (Book 712) Google seems to be excelling at Human Resources by taking an unconventional route to getting the job done just like their business decisions. One of Google’s methods is to correlate personal traits from employees’ survey answers to actual performance and then using the collected data to
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The Google Effect Sir Francis Bacon once said that “Knowledge is Power” and if that is the case‚ what does that make Google? Google has become the web’s most popular search engine and the company strives to create the perfect search engine of the world’s information that anyone would need‚ but does the good outweigh the bad? Internet search engines such as Google have changed the way an individual can use the internet in today’s society. Google has become a universal medium of information that
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does not become activated until the next-lower-level need is already satisfied. RELATE THE WORK ENVIRONMENT AT GOOGLE TO MASLOW’S NEEDS THEORY. Google is a open economy organization ranked number 1 by Fortune magazine as the best place to work in the United States. Google meets their employees’ lower-order need (P1) by offering them great pay along with many on site benefits and. Google also meets their employees’ higher-order needs by making their working environment comfortable and focusing on
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Points [pic] Google is a multinational internet and software corporation that specializes in internet search‚ cloud computing‚ and advertising technologies. It hosts and develops a number of internet-based services and products‚ and generates profit primarily from advertising through its AdWords program. Its mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. Some of its many successful products are Gmail‚ Google Chrome‚ Google Docs‚ Google Earth‚ and Youtube
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The Google Organization Nicole Northrop COM/530 COMMUNICATIONS FOR ACCOUNTANTS October 23‚ 2009 Lisa Siegal The Google organization maintains a small company feel. They want their employees to be comfortable sharing ideas and opinions. They want the employees to maintain and healthy life and work balance. So they provide them with benefits at work‚ like workout rooms‚ locker rooms‚ washers and dryers‚ massage room‚ video games‚ and so much more (Farfan‚ 2009). It seems to be relaxed
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talent and created an environment to stimulate innovation and creativity. Among those tech giants‚ Google has distanced itself by offering spectacular and unique on-site employee benefits. Those remarkable benefits have pushed Google to the top of Fortune’s 100 “best companies to work for list” for the last 4 years. (money.cnn.com‚ 2013) Google incorporated as a private US company in 1998 (Google Milestones‚ 2012) and is a perfect example of modern employee-centric policies and benefits. In an
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impact Google. Then describe elements that you anticipate will impact Google over the next several years. 1.) Founded in 1998‚ the Google company has been extremely successful in a large diversification of products for the user and the web. Originally created as a search engine that "understands exactly what you mean and gives you back exactly what you want." Now its products and services have grown to much more than that‚ but the philosophy remains. The macroenvironment for Google has changed
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