PCOL writes "The NY Times is running a story on how stock options that have given an surmised 1,000 mentors at Google a net worth of $5 million each affects the culture at Google. Google gives each of its new employees stock options, as well as a smaller number of shares of Google stock, as a recruiting incentive. The average options grant for a "Noogler" (new Google employee) who started a year ago was 685 shares at a price of roughly $475 a share which at last Friday's close would be worth $128,000. But employees say Google is different from other large high-tech companies where the day's stock price is a fixture on many people's computer screens. "It isn't considered 'Googley' to check the stock price," said one inventor adding that it is also considered unseemly to discuss the price with other employees. And the masseuse? In 1999 Bonnie Brown answered an ad for an in-house masseuse at Google "on a lark" and after five years of kneading engineers' backs, she retired, cashing in most of her stock options to travel the world, oversee a charitable abc's she founded, and write a book, still unpublished, titled "Giigle: How I Got Lucky Massaging Google.""
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
More: - Brought to my attention by
Mark



















Hey there, you can read more about Bonnie Brown and download excerpts from her hilarious book, Giigle, at her Web site: www.GiigleBook.com
Permanent Link