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11/3/2006 1:12 AM |
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My earlier writing about my attempt to
get employed by Google's EU division in Dublin has triggered responses
from California (USA), Turkey, Belgrade (Serbia), and two from Hungary.
So here is my impression of the way Google employs new people.
Do keep in mind that I did not come far in the
procedure — in fact I only had one interview with Google Recruitment
Team in Dublin before they filtered me off.
Google
is one of the world's fastest growing companies of 2006. It
currently hires 100 new people globally every week. The
recruitment is, thus, highly systematised and seems quite
professional. The number of positions as
advertising agents, such as AdSense Coordinators,
appears to be one of the fastest growing within the Google
corporation, judging from the feed-back I have had from my
articles. I shall deal with this below, based on my rather
short-lasting contact with them. The job-seeker's contact
with Google has at least these phases:
- On-line application.
- Language test
- First interview
- Later interviews
On-line
application
You include your virtual CV
with the application. Based on the real data — basically
whether you have the formal background, chiefly
university degree, as required — the
Google Recruitment staff will select you for later phases.
Language
test
The job applicant will get an e-mail from Google that requires
you to fill in a form in Microsoft Word, in my case it was the Google
Online Sales and Operations Coordinator
Worksheet. I got the e-mail at least a
week after the on-line application. The
questions deal with non-linguistic issues, such as
calculation,
definition/research, website
navigation, hypothetical
interaction with Google
customers. Finally, there will be
optional questions testing the
applicant's writing or
technical skills. Despite the
non-linguistic character of the
worksheet, it is a language test above
all. It filters off anybody who does not
possess the required language skills (or
friends with language skills!). Take your time with it, and
don't panic!
First
interview
Google's recruitment coordinator told me that there
are five interviews. I was called for this interview two days
after submitting the Worksheet. We appointed an
interview that took place six days later. The
recruitment officer, who — in my case
— was a native from Ireland, where
Google's EU Headquarter is located, told
that the purpose of the first interview was to clarify
details in the submitted CV as well as questions about the
applicant's knowledge of Google products. It would last half an hour.
In reality, I was speaking to the lady from the
recruitment team for about 18 minutes.
My
case:
The questions dealt mainly with details in my CV.
Google picked my last 3-4 work places and asked me to
describe the company type and my functions. I
graduated in 1989; had I graduated
recently, their questions might have been
different. I had the impression that they wanted to
see a line in my career that would lead to an
employment with Google. I don't have that line, so
I presume that this was their reason for refusal.
I advise all applicants to prepare themselves profoundly for that
question. Look over your CV once again, take notes for the last 3-4
employments, and write down your lines in advance. Plans are
nothing, planning is everything.
And make sure that your phone line is working optimally, be in
a silent room. Telephone interviews are hard because you miss the
mimicks of the collocutor, so you cannot moderate certain statements as
you would during a normal job interview. Also, it takes place in a
foreign language, so you might be unfamiliar with the particular accent
of the Google representative.
Other
question :
How will you describe AdSense, in lay terms, e.g., for
somebody who doesn't know anything about it? My answer was a
comparison with a newspaper ad:
A dedicated area on each page
containing text-only
advertising. The actual content of the
advertising would depend on
what was written on the page by the journalists.
Later
interview
Interview number 2 will also take place on phone (at least if
you live far away from the recruitment office). At least one of the
later interviews will be on the location of your future work-place,
where you will meet your colleagues. I did not make it that far
my-self, but good luck to all of you applicants.
Compared to other employers I have dealt with, Google's
recruitment procedure is rather in tune with modern
employment theories. Phase #1 proves your
interest in the job, as well as whether you satisfy
the basic requirements. Many employers, I have experienced,
filter off people even here, if you have studied something
odd that they had never heard of, i.e., prejudice rules. Then
you take the test. Testing is time-consuming to the
applicant, but it gives a chance to applicants who
have acquired their skills in an alternative manner. The
first interview will show whether you really understand the
job, and whether your career prior to that moment
is in line with the future position at Google.
The
applicant's personality
Personality is a big issue, too, but I gather it will be
tested more profoundly at a later stage, which I did not reach. Some
companies, e.g. Danish multinational
corporation A. P. Møller /
Mærsk, test your personality much earlier.
In this case, they will know whether you think like everybody
else in the organisation. Google does not
use this criterion as an early filter,
probably because they realise that a
diversity of
personalities is an
asset to the company. To comply team
work, the team members need to play different roles
in their personal interaction,
and subsequently, to have different
personalities to do the job the
best and most creative way. A more uniform
personality set-up of a team will make it more
vulnerable to change.
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