Google is the latest tech giant to confirm its hiring process will be slower during the second half of 2022 but it will continue to bring people in the technical areas.
Google has confirmed that its hiring process will be slowed down in the second half of 2022, going up to early 2023. Google CEO, Sundar Pichai has conveyed the details of the process, and also explained the ongoing economic slowdown has affected the company’s plans going forward, forcing Google to realign its hiring strategy and focus on the core areas where hiring might be unavoidable.
As is the case, Pichai has jotted down a memo, accessed by The Verge, shared with the employees at Google, who are also called Googlers. Here is the full memo from Google’s CEO.
Hi Googlers,
ard to believe we’re already through the first half of 2022. It’s the right opportunity to thank everyone for the great work so far this year and to share how my Leads and I are thinking about H2.
The uncertain global economic outlook has been top of mind. Like all companies, we’re not immune to economic headwinds. Something I cherish about our culture is that we’ve never viewed these types of challenges as obstacles. Instead, we’ve seen them as opportunities to deepen our focus and invest for the long term.
In these moments, I turn to our mission: to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. It’s what inspired me to join the company 18 years ago, and what makes me so optimistic about the impact we are able to have on the world. Knowledge and computing are how we drive our mission forward. That’s the lens we use to decide where to invest — whether it’s in areas like Search, Cloud, YouTube, Platforms and Hardware, the teams that support them, or in the AI that enables more helpful products and services.
We help people and society when we focus on what we do best and do it really well. The investments we’ve made in the first half of the year reflect this vision. In Q2 alone, we added approximately 10,000 Googlers, and have a strong number of commitments for Q3 start dates which reflects, in part, the seasonal college recruiting calendar. These are extraordinary numbers, and they show our excitement about long-term opportunities, even in uncertain times.
Because of the hiring progress achieved so far this year, we’ll be slowing the pace of hiring for the rest of the year, while still supporting our most important opportunities. For the balance of 2022 and 2023, we’ll focus our hiring on engineering, technical and other critical roles, and make sure the great talent we do hire is aligned with our long-term priorities.
Moving forward, we need to be more entrepreneurial, working with greater urgency, sharper focus, and more hunger than we’ve shown on sunnier days. In some cases, that means consolidating where investments overlap and streamlining processes. In other cases, that means pausing development and re-deploying resources to higher priority areas. Making the company more efficient is up to all of us — we’ll be creating more ways for you all to engage and share ideas to help, so stay tuned.
Scarcity breeds clarity — this is something we have been saying since the earliest days of Google. It’s what drives focus and creativity that ultimately leads to better products that help people all over the world. That’s the opportunity in front of us today, and I’m excited for us to rise to the moment again.
—Sundar
The company is clear in its strategy, and even though the hiring will slow down, it will continue to hire engineers and other technical roles. The “re-deploying of resources and pausing development” could be a cause of concern for some of the employees at Google, but we are hoping the company can absorb the staff instead of asking them to leave.
Google isn’t the only company to express the effects of the slowdown. Meta has also planned its hiring process for the year in a limited way, looking to consolidate its hiring to a minimum.