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  • iPod inventor Tony Fadell who sold his smart home company to Google says: If you hire 15-year 'career Googlers,' it will mess up your culture

iPod inventor Tony Fadell who sold his smart home company to Google says: If you hire 15-year 'career Googlers,' it will mess up your culture

Tony Fadell, the iPod inventor, argues that Silicon Valley's lavish perks are stifling innovation. He contrasts Apple's critical, high-pressure environment with Google's relaxed culture, where he believes excessive freedom breeds mediocrity. Fadell advises startups to avoid entitlement, warning that fancy perks cannot replace the hustle needed for breakthroughs, drawing from his experiences at Nest and General Magic.
iPod inventor Tony Fadell who sold his smart home company to Google says: If you hire 15-year 'career Googlers,' it will mess up your culture
Tony Fadell, the inventor of the iPod and founder of smart home company Nest, said Silicon Valley's lavish perks are hurting innovation and urgency in tech companies. Speaking at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, Fadell, who has worked with both and Apple, shared how the two companies have very different work cultures. “At Apple, you couldn't hide," Fadell said."Everyone was critical." On the contrary, the culture at Google was much more relax. Fadell, who sold Nest to Google for $3.2 billion, said “You were lucky if they even showed up… They'd take the bus in for lunch, get a massage, grab yogurt, and head home”.Criticizing Google's famous "20 percent time" policy that lets engineers work on side projects, he said too much freedom breeds "mediocrity."“It will mess up your culture" if you hire 15-year “career Googlers”," Fadell added.

A clash of cultures

When Google acquired Nest in 2014, Nest reportedly struggled under Google’s looser, bottom-up management style. As per a report by the New Yorker, this clash of cultures contributed to Fadell’s departure in 2016 and led Google to rethink how it handles new tech projects.Apple’s strict, top-down management style, on the other hand, has been studied in places like Harvard Business Review as a model for keeping creativity high without losing control.

Advice for startups

Sharing his advice for startups, Fadell said "Entitlement everywhere" is a hidden cost that no amount of funding, wellness programs, or free kombucha can fix. Do not mistake fancy office perks for real productivity, he advised. Fadell’s views on workplace culture go back to his early days at General Magic in the 1990s, where leaders promised not to hire "East Coast" executives who expected luxury perks like drivers and special toilets. Fadell believes the tech industry today is full of that same entitlement, which he says can "kill the hustle" needed for real breakthroughs.



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