Google, Incorporated Shares- A (GOOG)
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Dr. Eric E. Schmidt, Ph.D., CEO/Director/Chairman of the Board
1600 Amphitheatre Parkway
Mountain View, CA 94043
US
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Phone: (650) 253-0000
Fax: (650) 618-1499
Latest news from Portfolio
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Rescue Memo: You "Win." Now What?Apr 28 2008
-
Thank Google!Apr 17 2008
-
Google to the RescueApr 17 2008
-
Google as OracleApr 17 2008
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Google Revs Up Search GrowthApr 15 2008
Portfolio.com Overview
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
Sergey Brin and Larry Page had an idea to create a better search engine by tapping into the collective intelligence of the Web. After raising $1 million in seed money, the two Ph.D.-track students at Stanford dropped out of school as had so many Silicon Valley boy wonders before them and started Google in 1998. This move would ultimately make them two of the richest 30-somethings in the world.
WHAT THEY DO
Google organizes the world's information, makes it searchable, sells ads coordinated with user searches, and rakes in a huge pile of money in the process. Along the way, it professes to "do no evil" and has created a $1 billion philanthropic foundation.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Pick a success, any success: Google leads the search business with 50 to 70 percent of the market and has managed to carefully craft and control its image. It had an innovative initial stock offering in 2004, and in late 2006, it outmaneuvered its competitors to buy YouTube for $1.65 billion and a 5 percent stake in America Online for $1 billion. In April 2007, the company announced it was acquiring DoubleClick for $3.1 billion.
Google has tried to maintain a culture of inventiveness by catering to its employees' every need at its headquarters, known as the Googleplex. From free food at gourmet cafeterias to on-site doctors, employees are treated like royalty so that they can concentrate on the one thing that matters most: Google. The hallmark of this approach may be the company’s 70-20-10 policy: Employees are expected to spend 70 percent of their time on the core search and advertising businesses, 20 percent on related activities, and 10 percent on entirely new projects.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
Explosive growth combined with a self-righteous attitude have led Google to more than one serious gaffe. The company has created a host of gee-whiz and me-too products—Google Earth, Google Maps, and Froogle, to name a few—which create very little revenue. Google’s most publicized misstep was its decision in early 2006 to self-censor search results in China. For a company whose mission statement includes the phrase "unbiased, accurate, and free access to information," the move seemed like a naked play for profit. The company argued, however, that it would be more beneficial for the people of China if Google stayed rather than pulled out.
The hypersecretive nature of the company also made it look downright hypocritical in 2005 when a CNET reporter used basic Web searches to find personal information on C.E.O. Eric Schmidt, who joined the company in 2001. In response, Google refused to talk to CNET reporters for a year. Some privacy advocates also worry that the gargantuan amount of personal information Google captures could create problems in the future.
WHAT'S NEXT
By Schmidt’s tally, it will take another 300 years to organize the world’s information, so the company is rapidly growing its engineer-heavy workforce and ramping up its infrastructure by purchasing server farms to help deliver its many products. Many analysts are waiting for Google to monetize its numerous side projects, but in truth, analysts don’t receive enough information from the company to make pertinent recommendations. Google has tried to shield itself from Wall Street, providing little guidance on its future direction and maintaining a dual-class stock structure that gives more than two-thirds of the voting power to Brin, Page, and Schmidt.
Sergey Brin and Larry Page had an idea to create a better search engine by tapping into the collective intelligence of the Web. After raising $1 million in seed money, the two Ph.D.-track students at Stanford dropped out of school as had so many Silicon Valley boy wonders before them and started Google in 1998. This move would ultimately make them two of the richest 30-somethings in the world.
WHAT THEY DO
Google organizes the world's information, makes it searchable, sells ads coordinated with user searches, and rakes in a huge pile of money in the process. Along the way, it professes to "do no evil" and has created a $1 billion philanthropic foundation.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Pick a success, any success: Google leads the search business with 50 to 70 percent of the market and has managed to carefully craft and control its image. It had an innovative initial stock offering in 2004, and in late 2006, it outmaneuvered its competitors to buy YouTube for $1.65 billion and a 5 percent stake in America Online for $1 billion. In April 2007, the company announced it was acquiring DoubleClick for $3.1 billion.
Google has tried to maintain a culture of inventiveness by catering to its employees' every need at its headquarters, known as the Googleplex. From free food at gourmet cafeterias to on-site doctors, employees are treated like royalty so that they can concentrate on the one thing that matters most: Google. The hallmark of this approach may be the company’s 70-20-10 policy: Employees are expected to spend 70 percent of their time on the core search and advertising businesses, 20 percent on related activities, and 10 percent on entirely new projects.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
Explosive growth combined with a self-righteous attitude have led Google to more than one serious gaffe. The company has created a host of gee-whiz and me-too products—Google Earth, Google Maps, and Froogle, to name a few—which create very little revenue. Google’s most publicized misstep was its decision in early 2006 to self-censor search results in China. For a company whose mission statement includes the phrase "unbiased, accurate, and free access to information," the move seemed like a naked play for profit. The company argued, however, that it would be more beneficial for the people of China if Google stayed rather than pulled out.
The hypersecretive nature of the company also made it look downright hypocritical in 2005 when a CNET reporter used basic Web searches to find personal information on C.E.O. Eric Schmidt, who joined the company in 2001. In response, Google refused to talk to CNET reporters for a year. Some privacy advocates also worry that the gargantuan amount of personal information Google captures could create problems in the future.
WHAT'S NEXT
By Schmidt’s tally, it will take another 300 years to organize the world’s information, so the company is rapidly growing its engineer-heavy workforce and ramping up its infrastructure by purchasing server farms to help deliver its many products. Many analysts are waiting for Google to monetize its numerous side projects, but in truth, analysts don’t receive enough information from the company to make pertinent recommendations. Google has tried to shield itself from Wall Street, providing little guidance on its future direction and maintaining a dual-class stock structure that gives more than two-thirds of the voting power to Brin, Page, and Schmidt.
Portfolio Articles
-
Rescue Memo: You "Win." Now What?
Yahoo may succeed in fending off Microsoft. But it will be a pyrrhic victory for Jerry Yang, unless...Apr 28 2008 -
Thank Google!
Who was worried? Internet advertising and search giant blasts through forecasts.Apr 17 2008 -
Google to the Rescue
Shrugging off nervous parsing of click counts, the Web ad giant revs up revenue and profit.
Apr 17 2008 -
Google as Oracle
The internet bellwether has reported fewer clicks on its ads. The billion-dollar question is what that means.
Apr 17 2008 -
Google Revs Up Search Growth
The juggernaut may be back. But are advertisers?Apr 15 2008
News Feeds
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EU warns Google over photos on Street View
AP
May 15 2008
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Google starts to blur faces in Street View photos
AP
May 14 2008
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ComScore puts Google sites at No. 1 for first time
AP
May 14 2008
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Google joins effort to make more Web sites more sociable
AP
May 13 2008
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MIT students show power of open cell phone systems
AP
May 12 2008
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Google software lets any Web site add social networking
Sacramento
May 12 2008
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Advocacy groups take aim at Google-Yahoo partnership
AP
May 09 2008
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Google execs hope for long-term ad deal with Yahoo
AP
May 09 2008
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With Microsoft mum, analysts mull next moves for Live Search
AP
May 08 2008
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Google looking golden again after challenging stretch
AP
May 08 2008
Portfolio Blogs
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The Social Networking Orgy: What the ---- ?!
May 12 2008
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False Positives at Blogger
May 12 2008
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Bullish on Google — and Yahoo?
May 08 2008
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Jerry: You Wanted Independence, So Back Away From Google Slowly...
May 08 2008
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Get Ready for GoogleReligion.com
Apr 24 2008
Press Releases
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Google to Offer Live Webcast of Factory Tour of Search Press Gathering May-16-2008, 01:12PM EDT
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Google to Present at the Goldman Sachs Ninth Annual Internet Conference May-14-2008, 02:01PM EDT
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Google to Present at the NASDAQ OMX 21st Investor Program May-13-2008, 04:01PM EDT
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Previewing Google Friend Connect: Website Owners Can Make Any Site Social May-12-2008, 09:00AM EDT
News From Around the Web
News
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How Google's Friend Connect works
(The Guardian)May 18 2008 -
Google links up with RTA for public trip planner
(cleveland.com)May 18 2008 -
A look at Internet grammar
(Bismarck Tribune)May 18 2008 -
May 18 2008
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What I'm Reading This Week: Commodities, Inflation and BRICs
(SeekingAlpha)May 18 2008 -
Quiet Period Rules Revised
(Inc. Magazine)May 18 2008 -
Google Cuts Price, Rebrands Postini Security Service
(Yahoo! News)May 18 2008 -
Barbecue, live music and more at Google on Wednesday
(Charlotte Observer)May 18 2008 -
Whimsy workplace spurs creativity
(Edmonton Sun)May 18 2008 -
Yahoo! Seeking Open Alliance With Google
(New York Post)May 16 2008
Blogs
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Hillary Clinton’s Equal Opportunity Disappointment
(Outside the Beltway)May 18 2008 -
New roundup: The stories leading other websites
(On Deadline)May 18 2008 -
May 18 2008
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Google Celebrates Bauhaus B'Day With "Broken" Logo
(Search Engine Land)May 18 2008 -
2008 Google Summer of Code Highlights
(Slashdot)May 18 2008
Employees
Number of Employees: 16,805
Revenue per Employee: $1,402,736
Top Executives
Robert Alan Eustace, Divisional Senior VP
George Reyes, CFO/Senior VP
Shona L. Brown, Divisional Senior VP
David C. Drummond, Senior VP, Divisional/Secretary/Other Executive Officer
Jonathan J. Rosenberg, Divisional Senior VP
Omid Kordestani, Divisional Senior VP
Board of Directors
Shirley M. Tilghman, Director
Paul S. Otellini, Director
Sergey Brin, Director/Founder/President, Divisional
Larry Page, Director/Founder/President, Divisional
Dr.Arthur D. Levinson, Ph.D., Director
John L. Hennessy, Director
Financials
Quarterly
Annual
| Income Statement | 04/2008 | 02/2008 | 10/2007 | 07/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 1.77 Bil. | 1.67 Bil. | 1.41 Bil. | 1.34 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 3.41 Bil. | 3.16 Bil. | 2.82 Bil. | 2.54 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 1.88 Bil. | 1.73 Bil. | 1.57 Bil. | 1.33 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 1.71 Bil. | 1.61 Bil. | 1.47 Bil. | 1.24 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 1.31 Bil. | 1.21 Bil. | 1.07 Bil. | 925.12 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 4.17 | 3.86 | 3.44 | 2.98 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 4.12 | 3.79 | 3.38 | 2.93 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 04/2008 | 02/2008 | 10/2007 | 07/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 6.52 Bil. | 6.08 Bil. | 5.11 Bil. | 4.49 Bil. |
| Total Assets | 15.46 Bil. | 17.29 Bil. | 15.73 Bil. | 14.86 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 2.46 Bil. | 2.04 Bil. | 1.78 Bil. | 1.32 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 24.34 Bil. | 22.69 Bil. | 21.04 Bil. | 19.66 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 04/2008 | 02/2008 | 10/2007 | 07/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 1.78 Bil. | 5.78 Bil. | 4.08 Bil. | 2.45 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | -1.41 Bil. | -3.68 Bil. | -2.81 Bil. | -1.72 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | 28.66 Mil. | 403.07 Mil. | 257.65 Mil. | 208.64 Mil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | 438.16 Mil. | 2.54 Bil. | 1.56 Bil. | 948.98 Mil. |
| Income Statement | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 5.68 Bil. | 3.65 Bil. | 2.28 Bil. | 1.31 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 10.91 Bil. | 6.95 Bil. | 3.86 Bil. | 1.88 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 5.21 Bil. | 4.12 Bil. | 2.4 Bil. | 989.66 Mil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 4.83 Bil. | 4.01 Bil. | 2.14 Bil. | 650.23 Mil. |
| Total Net Income | 4.2 Bil. | 3.08 Bil. | 1.47 Bil. | 399.12 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 13.53 | 10.21 | 5.31 | 2.07 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 13.29 | 9.94 | 5.02 | 1.46 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 6.08 Bil. | 3.54 Bil. | 3.88 Bil. | 426.87 Mil. |
| Total Assets | 17.29 Bil. | 13.04 Bil. | 9 Bil. | 2.69 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 2.04 Bil. | 1.3 Bil. | 745.38 Mil. | 340.37 Mil. |
| Total Capitalization | 22.69 Bil. | 17.04 Bil. | 9.42 Bil. | 2.93 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 5.78 Bil. | 3.58 Bil. | 2.46 Bil. | 977.04 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | -3.68 Bil. | -6.9 Bil. | -3.36 Bil. | -1.9 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | 403.07 Mil. | 2.97 Bil. | 4.37 Bil. | 1.19 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | 2.54 Bil. | -332.5 Mil. | 3.45 Bil. | 277.88 Mil. |
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