Thanks to all its money, Google is a big winner in the war for talent in Silicon Valley.
The latest evidence is a story we just heard from the founder of a large, successful enterprise startup.
This founder told us that his startup tried to poach a "programmer" currently working at Google.
The startup made the programmer what it thought was a big offer: a $500,000 salary.
"He blew us off," said the founder.
The
programmer told the startup thanks for the offer, but Google was
currently paying him $3 million per year in cash and restricted stock
units.
(Restricted stock units, or "RSUs," are as good as stock in that the programmer won't have to buy them to get them.)
Google has an industry-wide reputation for getting - and keeping - the people it wants.
It's
pretty impressive, for example, that Google was able to remove Andy
Rubin from the top of Android and still manage to keep him inside the
company, working on robots.
This is a credit to CEO Larry Page.
He's made Google into a place where really bright people get to work on
extremely ambitious, large scale problems. Before he took over Google as
CEO in 2011, the company was losing a lot of people to startups like
Facebook and Twitter. Now, not so much.
It is also a credit to the power of money, which Google has a lot of.