Business Standard

Why AI researcher­s at Google have desks next to the boss

- CADE METZ

If you want to understand the priorities of a technology company, first look at the seating chart. At Google’s Silicon Valley headquarte­rs, the chief executive, Sundar Pichai, now shares a floor with Google Brain, a research lab dedicated to artificial intelligen­ce (AI).

When Facebook created its own AI lab at its offices about seven miles away, it temporaril­y gave AI researcher­s desks next to the fish bowl of a conference room where its chief executive and founder, Mark Zuckerberg, holds his meetings.

“I can high-five Mark and Sheryl from my desk, and the AI team was right next to us,” said Facebook’s chief technology officer, Mike Schroepfer, referring to Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, the CEO.

Even Overstock.com, the online retailer based in the Salt Lake City area, now runs a mini-research operation called OLabs. It sits directly outside the office of the company’s chief executive, Patrick Byrne. A growing number of tech companies are pushing research labs and other far-reaching engineerin­g efforts closer to the boss. The point is unmistakab­le: What they are doing matters to the chief executive. It may even be the future of the company.

“The world is moving faster and faster. It is being driven by technology and innovation,” said John Kotter, an emeritus professor at Harvard Business School who has written several books on business leadership. “And a lot of these businesses are concluding that the speed of technologi­cal innovation should be the heart of everything.”

A year ago, the Google Brain team of mathematic­ians, coders and hardware engineers sat in a small office building on the other side of the company’s campus. But over the past few months, it switched buildings and now works right beside the loungelike area where Pichai and other top executives work. Jeffrey Dean, the celebrated Google engineer who oversees the Brain lab, is a short walk from Pichai. So are Ian Goodfellow, the researcher behind a new AI technique that generates lifelike images on its own, and Norm Jouppi, who explores ways of accelerati­ng AI research through a new breed of computer chip.

“Any CEO thinks a lot about where people are sitting — who they can walk around and have casual conversati­ons with,” said Diane Greene, who oversees Google’s cloud computing team and sits on the board of Alphabet, Google’s parent company. “It is a very significan­t statement that he has moved that group right next him.”

Google is placing big bets on the AI being explored by researcher­s like Goodfellow. Many questions still hang over the progress of this research. But Pichai and the rest of the Google leadership hope it will accelerate the evolution of everything from smartphone­s and home appliances to internet services and robotics.

To Byrne, shaking up the seating chart at Overstock was a bit like a common management tactic in the military, when an officer will work closely with a small “command initiative­s group” that is considerab­ly more nimble than the rest of the organisati­on. “We were getting bureaucrat­ic,” Byrne said. “And this was a way of creating added competitio­n outside the bureaucrac­y.” These big companies are trying to duplicate the vibe of a Silicon Valley start-up, where the boss is next to everyone. As start-ups grow, they often put key technology teams next to the chief executive. Greene, who was the chief executive of the software company VMware, said she had always made a point of sitting beside the top engineers because they saw the company’s future. There are limits to these arrangemen­ts. When Facebook built a team to explore the future of virtual reality on its vast social network, it made a similar desk move. The group is no longer seated next to Zuckerberg. Facebook said this was because the group had grown too large. But across Silicon Valley, virtual reality is no longer the buzziest of topics. That honor belongs to AI.

Where you sit has mattered for years at Facebook. The company’s ad group traditiona­lly sat far away from Zuckerberg. But after Facebook went public and started a big push for revenue, important members of the ad team moved next to the boss, said Antonio García Martínez, who wrote a book about his experience­s inside Facebook.

 ??  ?? When Facebook created its own AI lab at its offices, it temporaril­y gave AI researcher­s desks next to the fish bowl of a conference room where founder Mark Zuckerberg holds his meetings
When Facebook created its own AI lab at its offices, it temporaril­y gave AI researcher­s desks next to the fish bowl of a conference room where founder Mark Zuckerberg holds his meetings

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