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What Google Learned From Its Quest to Build the Perfect Team

build the perfect team

  • Like most 25-year-olds, Julia Rozovsky wasn’t sure what she wanted to do with her life. She had worked at a consulting firm, but it wasn’t a good match. Then she became a researcher for two professors at Harvard, which was interesting but lonely. Maybe a big corporation would be a better fit. Or perhaps a fast-growing start-up. All she knew for certain was that she wanted to find a job that was more social. ‘‘I wanted to be part of a community, part of something people were building together,’’ she told me. She thought about various opportunities — Internet companies, a Ph.D. program — but nothing seemed exactly right. So in 2009, she chose the path that allowed her to put off making a decision: She applied to business schools and was accepted by the Yale School of Management.

  • THE WORK ISSUE: REIMAGINING THE OFFICE:

  1. How to Build a Perfect Team
  2. The War on Meetings
  3. The Case for Blind Hiring
  4. Failure to Lunch
  5. The ‘Good Jobs’ Gamble
  6. Rethinking the Work-Life Equation
  7. The Rise of White-Collar Automation
  8. The Post-Cubicle Office
  9. The New Dream Jobs
  • In late 2014, Rozovsky and her fellow Project Aristotle number-crunchers began sharing their findings with select groups of Google’s 51,000 employees. By then, they had been collecting surveys, conducting interviews and analyzing statistics for almost three years. They hadn’t yet figured out how to make psychological safety easy, but they hoped that publicizing their research within Google would prompt employees to come up with some ideas of their own.

For more Information please visit: THE WORK ISSUE.