Sundar Pichai is the CEO of Google and Alphabet.
Sundar Pichai is the CEO of Google and Alphabet.
Sundar Pichai is an Indian-born American executive who is best known as the CEO of Google and its holding company, Alphabet incInc. He is known as a successful innovator, with a sharp memory and strong opinions, whose organizational skills and early focus on developing new products and services at Google brought him to the attention of Google co-founderscofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin and led him eventually to the CEO role at Google.
Sundar Pichai was born Pichai Sundararajan on June 10, 1972, in Madras, now Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, to a middle classmiddle-class family. His father, Reguntha Pichai, was an electrical engineer who worked at the British company General Electric Company, and his mother, Lakshmi Pichai, worked as a stenographer. Speaking on his childhood, Pichai has said:
In speaking of his early interest in technology, Pichai has credited his father and has relayed a story about his family receiving their first telephone. They had applied for the telephone, and waited five years, and once the phone arrived, he saw how neighbors would visit to connect with their family, and showed Pichai, in his words, "the power of what's possible with technology."
Sundar Pichai would attendattended the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, where he would graduategraduated from in 1993 with a degree in metallurgy and a silver medal. He was subsequently awarded a scholarship to Stanford University, where he would attend and eventually earn his master's degree in material sciences and engineering in 1997, after abandoning the Ph.D. program.
Following his graduation from Stanford University, he would joinjoined Applied Materials, a semiconductor manufacturer in Silicon Valley, where he worked as a product manager, before he. leftHe tothen pursuepursued an MBA at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, from whereand he would graduategraduated in 2002. After earning his MBA, Pichai wouldjoined jointhe management consulting firm McKinsey & Company for a few years.
In 2004, Sundar Pichai would joinjoined Google as the head of product management and development. He was tasked with developing the Google Toolbar, which enabled users on the Microsoft Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox web browsers to easily access the Google search engine, and allowed Google to track browsing behavior to power the AdWords targeting engine. The Google Toolbar was a success, but Pichai feared the browsers would develop their own, proprietary search functions and lock Google out.
HeOver the next few years, he pitched, over the next few years, for Google to develop theirits own browser. And thoughAlthough he was initially unsuccessful, he would continued to campaign for the browser, which would eventually be greenlit and would releasereleased to the public in 2008 as Google Chrome. Over the next few years, Google Chrome would become the most popular web browser in the world. That same year,In 2008, Pichai was named vice president of product development, a more active and more public role in the company.
Following this, Pichai headed the development of the Chrome Operating System and the Chromebook program, which launched in 2011. In 2012, he would bewas named senior vice president of product development. He would then taketook over the development of the Android Operating System in 2013, wherewhen he was noted as integrating Android better with the rest of Google, and where his tenure was noted for an increase in the collaboration between Google and Android, which is credited in an increase in the usability and popularity of the mobile operating system since.
By 2014, he was named the leader of all of Google's products and platforms, where. heHe oversaw Search, Maps, Play, Android, Chrome, Gmail, and Google Workspace. At this time, in 2014, he was known to help to negotiate Google's $3.2 billion acquisition of Nest Labs.
Pichai, during his tenure at Google as a product manager and developer, was aggressively pursued by other companies. The first such pursuit occurred in 2011 when Pichai was reportedly pursued by microblogging service Twitter. In 2014, he was suggested to be in contention for the role of CEO of Microsoft, with a lot of industry gossip placing him in serious contention for the role that eventually went to Satya Nadella. Google was able to retain Sundar Pichai during these lures, and in 2015, he was named as Google's new CEO when Google reorganized into Alphabet - inAlphabet—in part to allow Google to focus on its products and services, rather than managing its subsidiaries and acquisitions - Pichai was named as Google's new CEO.
As CEO, Sundar Pichai has led Google to invest in new opportunities, such as Google Cloud, and he continues to research advanced technologies to continue to push Google forward, such as machine learning, generative artificial intelligence (AI), and quantum computing. As part of Alphabet's structure, which was to place a CEO to run each business, Pichai was put in charge of one of the most pivotal and important parts of this structure, which included Search, Maps, Commerce, Advertising, and infrastructure, among others.
Sundar Pichai's management style has been calledreferred ato as low-key style, with what has been called an unusually firm handle on diplomacy, which has been credited to his rapid rise through Google. He has been noted to have strong opinions with clear points of view, but allows those under him to speak and offer their opinions before he gives his own. Others have noted his ability to develop close, collaborative teams, and puttingput people in the places and roles that fit them best, which allows him, in the opinion of some, to delegate effectively;. andHe healso works to nurture those teams and help them grow.
In 2019, in part on the strength of the work Sundar Pichai did as the CEO of Google, co-founderscofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin announced Sundar Pichai would be named the CEO of Alphabet. Unlike when Pichai was Google CEO and Page was Alphabet CEO, Pichai remained the Google CEO while also holding the Alphabet CEO role.
In 2023, Sundar Pichai has faced some criticism, from inside and outside Google. This has come in part during Google's fumbling of consumer and enterprise AI efforts, and in the wake of Microsoft and OpenAI's deal, which makes Microsoft's Bing a serious competitor to Google's main business segment. Further, the criticism has come as Google was, previous to early 2023, seen as being in a front-runner role of AI development based on the company's army of engineers and researchers, access to data and data centers, and quantum computing efforts.
This has led critics of Pichai's to wonder if he, and by extension Google, have become complacent, and whether Pichai is capable of taking the company to the next step. Some have suggested this is due to Pichai's slower pace of decision makingdecision-making, his reported dislike for conflict and for making unpopular decisions, and those critics have reportedly suggested his voice as a leader is too weak in the company. Those same critics have said, at the same time, that were Sundar Pichai able to allay some of those concerns, they would not see a reason for him to step down from his current role.
Sundar Pichai has joined a group of technologists, executives, and academics calling for a global regulatory framework for AI similar to treaties used to regulate nuclear arms, whileand also warning about the coporatecorporate competition over AI, leading to safety concerns being pushed aside. Pichai's concerns are based on the potential of the technology to radically and rapidly change societies, and that many of the developers and deployers of the technology do not completely understand how it works. DescribedPichai has described AI technology as a "black box" in the industry, Pichai notes that hiswith concerns are that this is a place in the technology's working which developers do not fully understand the aspects, similar to the lack of understanding inof how the human brain works.
In relation to societies, Pichai's concerns are around a described "mismatch" between the pace at which AI is developing and advancing and the pace at which society thinks and adapts to change. He has noted that AI, he has noted, has been developing and evolving at a pace far more rapid than society is able to keep up;, saying at one point that AI will impact everything, from every product across every company, and will be a profound technology. However, he has, in an interview, he noted:
Compared to any other technology, I've seen more people worried about it earlier in it'sits life cycle. So I feel optimistic.
Pichai's other concerns are around the AI modelsmodel's ability to develop skills that the model was not expected to have. He noted, in an interview, that Google's generative AI model, Bard, taught itself Bengali, even though it was not trained to know the language, after a few prompts in Bengali. Similarly, there are concerns aroundabout the "hallucinations" of AI models. These hallucinations occur when an AI model answers a question or prompt, but the answer is incorrect (sometimes wildly), but the AI model asserts the answer is correct with confidence. The concerns over these hallucination'shallucinations isare that they can lead to fake news, deep fakes, and weaponization with a confidence that is very convincing.
Sundar Pichai moved permanently to the United States after graduating from Stanford University. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife, Anjali Pichai, and their two children. The couple met in college, and married shortly after Sundar Pichai started a job at Applied Materials and Anjali Pichai had moved to the United States.
April 20, 2023
August 10, 2015
October 25, 2014
October 25, 2014
March 13, 2013
2012
2008
Google chief executive officer
CEO of Google and Alphabet
Sundar Pichai is an Indian-born American executive who is best known as the CEO of Google and its holding company Alphabet inc. He is known as a successful innovator, with a sharp memory and strong opinions, whose organizational skills and early focus on developing new products and services at Google brought him to the attention of Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin and led him eventually to the CEO role at Google.
Sundar Pichai was born Pichai Sundararajan on June 10, 1972 in Madras, now Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India to a middle class family. His father, Reguntha Pichai, was an electrical engineer who worked at the British company General Electric Company, and his mother, Lakshmi Pichai, worked as a stenographer. Speaking on his childhood, Pichai has said:
There was a simplicity to my life, which was very nice compared with today's world. We lived in a kind of modest housed, shared with tenants. We would sleep on the living room floor. There was a drought when I was growing up, and we had anxiety. Even now, I can never sleep without a bottle of water beside my bed. Other houses had refrigerators, and then we finally got one. It was a big deal.
In speaking of his early interest in technology, Pichai has credited his father and has relayed a story about his family receiving their first telephone. They had applied for the telephone, and waited five years, and once the phone arrived he saw how neighbors would visit to connect with their family, and showed Pichai, in his words, "the power of what's possible with technology."
Sundar Pichai would attend the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur where he would graduate from in 1993 with a degree in metallurgy and a silver medal. He was subsequently awarded a scholarship to Stanford University, where he would attend and eventually earn his master's degree in material sciences and engineering in 1997, after abandoning the Ph.D. program.
Following his graduation from Stanford University, he would join Applied Materials, a semiconductor manufacturer in Silicon Valley, where he worked as a product manager, before he left to pursue an MBA at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, from where he would graduate in 2002. After earning his MBA, Pichai would join management consulting firm McKinsey & Company for a few years.
In 2004, Sundar Pichai would join Google as the head of product management and development. He was tasked with developing the Google Toolbar, which enabled users on the Microsoft Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox web browsers to easily access the Google search engine, and allowed Google to track browsing behavior to power the AdWords targeting engine. The Google Toolbar was a success, but Pichai feared the browsers would develop their own, proprietary search functions and lock Google out.
He pitched, over the next few years, for Google to develop their own browser. And though he was initially unsuccessful, he would continued to campaign for the browser which would eventually be greenlit and would release to the public in 2008 as Google Chrome. Over the next few years, Google Chrome would become the most popular web browser in the world. That same year, 2008, Pichai was named vice president of product development, a more active and more public role in the company.
Following this, Pichai headed the development of the Chrome Operating System and the Chromebook program, which launched in 2011. In 2012 he would be named senior vice president of product development. He would then take over the development of the Android Operating System in 2013, where he was noted as integrating Android better with the rest of Google, and where his tenure was noted for an increase in the collaboration between Google and Android, which is credited in an increase in the usability and popularity of the mobile operating system since.
By 2014 he was named the leader of all of Google's products and platforms, where he oversaw Search, Maps, Play, Android, Chrome, Gmail, and Google Workspace. At this time, in 2014, he was known to help to negotiate Google's $3.2 billion acquisition of Nest Labs.
Pichai, during his tenure at Google as a product manager and developer, was aggressively pursued by other companies. The first such pursuit occurred in 2011 when Pichai was reportedly pursued by microblogging service Twitter. In 2014, he was suggested to be in contention for the role of CEO of Microsoft, with a lot of industry gossip placing him in serious contention for the role that eventually went to Satya Nadella. Google was able to retain Sundar Pichai during these lures, and in 2015, when Google reorganized into Alphabet - in part to allow Google to focus on its products and services, rather than managing its subsidiaries and acquisitions - Pichai was named as Google's new CEO.
As CEO, Sundar Pichai has led Google to invest in new opportunities, such as Google Cloud, and continues to research advanced technologies to continue to push Google forward, such as machine learning, generative artificial intelligence (AI), and quantum computing. As part of Alphabet's structure, which was to place a CEO to run each business, Pichai was put in charge of one of the most pivotal and important parts of this structure, which included Search, Maps, Commerce, Advertising, and infrastructure, among others.
Sundar Pichai's management style has been called a low-key style, with what has been called an unusually firm handle on diplomacy, which has been credited to his rapid rise through Google. He has been noted to have strong opinions with clear points of view, but allows those under him to speak and offer their opinions before he gives his own. Others have noted his ability to develop close, collaborative teams, and putting people in the places and roles that fit them best, which allows him, in the opinion of some, to delegate effectively; and he works to nurture those teams and help them grow.
In 2019, in part on the strength of the work Sundar Pichai did as the CEO of Google, co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin announced Sundar Pichai would be named the CEO of Alphabet. Unlike when Pichai was Google CEO and Page was Alphabet CEO, Pichai remained the Google CEO while also holding the Alphabet CEO role.
In 2023, Sundar Pichai has faced some criticism, from inside and outside Google. This has come in part during Google's fumbling of consumer and enterprise AI efforts, and in the wake of Microsoft and OpenAI's deal which makes Microsoft's Bing a serious competitor to Google's main business segment. Further, the criticism has come as Google was, previous to early 2023, seen as being in a front-runner role of AI development based on the company's army of engineers and researchers, access to data and data centers, and quantum computing efforts.
This has led critics of Pichai's to wonder if he, and by extension Google, have become complacent, and whether Pichai is capable of taking the company to the next step. Some have suggested this is due to Pichai's slower pace of decision making, his reported dislike for conflict and for making unpopular decisions, and those critics have reportedly suggested his voice as a leader is too weak in the company. Those same critics have said, at the same time, that were Sundar Pichai able to allay some of those concerns, they would not see a reason for him to step down from his current role.
Sundar Pichai has joined a group of technologists, executives, and academics calling for a global regulatory framework for AI similar to treaties used to regulate nuclear arms, while also warning about the coporate competition over AI leading to safety concerns being pushed aside. Pichai's concerns are based on the potential of the technology to radically and rapidly change societies, and that many of the developers and deployers of the technology do not completely understand how it works. Described as a "black box" in the industry, Pichai notes that his concerns are that this is a place in the technology's working which developers do not fully understand, similar to the lack of understanding in how the human brain works.
In relation to societies, Pichai's concerns are around a described "mismatch" between the pace at which AI is developing and advancing and the pace at which society thinks and adapts to change. AI, he has noted, has been developing and evolving at a pace far more rapid than society is able to keep up; saying at one point AI will impact everything, from every product across every company, and will be a profound technology. However, he has, in interview, noted:
Compared to any other technology, I've seen more people worried about it earlier in it's life cycle. So I feel optimistic.
Pichai's other concerns are around the AI models ability to develop skills that the model was not expected to have. He noted, in an interview, that Google's generative AI model Bard taught itself Bengali, even though it was not trained to know the language, after a few prompts in Bengali. Similarly, there are concerns around the "hallucinations" of AI models. These hallucinations occur when an AI model answers a question or prompt, but the answer is incorrect (sometimes wildly) but the AI model asserts the answer is correct with confidence. The concerns over these hallucination's is that they can lead to fake news, deep fakes, and weaponization with a confidence that is very convincing.
Sundar Pichai moved permanently to the United States after graduating from Stanford University. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife, Anjali Pichai, and their two children. The couple met in college, and married shortly after Sundar Pichai started a job at Applied Materials and Anjali Pichai had moved to the United States.
April 20, 2023
April 17, 2023
December 3, 2019
August 10, 2015
October 25, 2014
October 25, 2014
March 13, 2013
2012
September 2008
2008