marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - May 15 2008 | the, i, by
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 02 2008 | the, google, i
Quoted: With two high-ranking Google executives leaving the Big G within a month's time, I thought it would be interesting to go back through Google's executive management page over the years and see how it reflects changes among the higher-ups. Below, there are a series of tables and commentary that hopefully let you understand the shifting currents at-a-glance. Some notes. First, I think who gets listed on this page -- and the order in which they are listed -- is important. This has to be a perk for some execs -- that they'll get to show up and be profiled on that page. In addition, the order is not always alphabetical. With the exception of the big three -- CEO Eric Schmidt, Larry Page and Sergey Brin -- I think who shows up first when a non-alphabetical listing can be significant. There can be some exceptions to this, and I'll note them as part of the charts. Let's dive in.The charts below reflect the exact order people were listed on the executive management pages, for the dates shown at the top of each charge. There may have been other changes between dates, of course. Maybe eventually I'll go back and redo
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 30 2008 | the, social, i
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 27 2008 | the, i, link
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 27 2008 | the, i, google
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 27 2008 | the, i, link
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 27 2008 | the, link, i
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 27 2008 | the, i, google
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 27 2008 | the, i, by
marketingpro | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 26 2008 | google, the, i




