Comments on: An end to the Google bonus fairytale?
Google employees used to fairytale-like cash bonuses on the north side of $20,000 will have have to put up with a cell phone this year.
Google employees used to fairytale-like cash bonuses on the north side of $20,000 will have have to put up with a cell phone this year.
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
The Web is now the place to go for news and entertainment. Look here for the latest on blogs, music, video, virtual worlds, social networking and more.
Add this feed to your online news reader
1) Google never gave out $20K xmas bonuses. The average in the past was of about $1000 per employee.
2) Employees received an unlocked version of the G1 phone. That unlocked version retails for about $499, not $179 as mentioned in this article.
Exactly what you said (still $99 off but much closer). Read closely next time.
Everyone in the world is self-centered, unless they are forced to not be for some reason.
people are laid off, people are finding themselves on the street or may not know where their next meal will come from, let alone a Christmas present for their kids. save your whining
Of course, corporate level folks across the nation, hopefully, aren't taking any bonuses while they're laying off staff. Starve yourself before you cut off others, or you'll end up losing loyalty.
if Google includes it on their W-2, sure. otherwise I'll believe it when I see it. and at that, they may just opt to list the wholesale (company cost) rather than retail price (includes advertising, overhead, salesperson's commission/salary, and markup).
If my current employer offered me an HTC Dream for Christmas, I'd be ecstatic. The Christmas bonus is just that; a BONUS. It's not something to rely upon as part of your salary.
All y'all should just chill out. The Cnet journalist was being sarcastic, he wasn't actually saying that it was a "bummer".
- by michaelo1966 December 23, 2008 1:34 PM PST
- It was a smart gift. Google employees will be seen around using their phones and that may spark interest and allow them to demonstrate it at airports, coffee shops ... places where geeks with money and time chat to other geeks w/ money and time. As more influential types see it, it may cause a cascade effect. I was just talking to somebody who closed a $2.1 million contract from what started as a discussion waiting in line to get a cup of coffee: networking in real-life still rules for PR.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(26 Comments)