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Google cuts back on 20% me-time: Can innovation be the work of one department?

For months, rumours have circulated that Google has axed its commitment to giving its workers 20% of work time for self-directed projects. Over the weekend, those rumours received strong validation, when Google sources told online business publication Quartz that the company is slowly eliminating its 20% time commitment. First, it required engineers to get approval […]
Myriam Robin
Myriam Robin

For months, rumours have circulated that Google has axed its commitment to giving its workers 20% of work time for self-directed projects.

Over the weekend, those rumours received strong validation, when Google sources told online business publication Quartz that the company is slowly eliminating its 20% time commitment.

First, it required engineers to get approval from their managers to work on independent projects. And now, the website claims, Googleโ€™s upper management has discouraged managers from approving such requests.

In a follow-up to Quartzโ€™s story, Google engineers told the publication that stack ranking, where employees are ranked according to job performance, discourages the use of 20% time.

Products such as Gmail, Adsense and Google News have all emerged from the 20% time policy, which has in the past been praised by Google executives as one of the companyโ€™s key competitive advantages.

The change marks a shift in Google, as the company changes from prizing an innovative, start-up culture to a more traditional corporate one where innovation is siloed into specific departments, like the secretive Google X labs.

The winding down of 20% time is highly significant, innovation expert Ken Hudson tells SmartCompany.

โ€œPeople look up to Google,โ€ he says. โ€œTheyโ€™re a real thought-leader. And Googleโ€™s success speaks for itself.โ€ Companies inspired by Googleโ€™s 20% time include Australian tech success story Atlassian, which operates a similar program.

โ€œNow that Google appears to be winding down or limiting this initiative, I think it will definitely impact other leaders and organisations, who will be less likely to start these initiatives if they havenโ€™t already,โ€ Hudson says.

โ€œThis is a pity. Research by Adobe recently said that only one in four people are realising their creative potential. The biggest barriers causing this are a lack of time and a lack of tools.

โ€œI think the 20% rule gave people time to think creatively, and the management and leadership tools necessary to do so. Iโ€™m curious to see whether this is the kind of policy that works in the short-term, but costs Google in the long term.โ€

Asked whether innovation can successfully be restricted to the job description of one person or one department, Hudson says it depends on the innovation being considered.

โ€œWith product innovation, it makes sense to have that be focused and driven by a specific department, with access to marketing and consumer insights.

โ€œBut if you want broader innovation, you need an innovative culture. Only then can you see innovation across the board, in things that arenโ€™t glamorous such as better ways of serving customers, or better ways to do payroll.โ€

Hudson adds that thereโ€™s always a trade-off in large companies between innovation and productivity. Companies are under pressure to focus on what theyโ€™re good at, and move away from being all things to all people. And a movement away from an innovative culture to a specialised one is part of the natural evolution of large companies.

โ€œI think plenty of the big technology companies are going down this route,โ€ he says. โ€œApple, you could argue, is doing something similar. With the demise of Steve Jobs, they donโ€™t have this visionary leader who wants to stick to the companyโ€™s roots, and theyโ€™re becoming a much more traditional company as a result.โ€