"One of the tenets we strongly believe in," says Setty, "is if you give people freedom, they will amaze you." Setty admits that this is quite a progressive idea—allowing employees greater discretion on work hours and when it’s time to go to the gym, play volleyball, or get a massage. (Immediately following our 2 p.m. meeting, Chade-Meng Tan excused himself to take a shower.) But Google also is highly selective in its hiring, and purposely recruits ambitious people with proven track records of high achievement. "That means we’re harnessing energy rather than coaxing it out of people," says Setty. But he also admits, "in the absence of that motivation, we’d be playing defense and worrying about people taking advantage of all this freedom."
But, at Google, all that autonomy comes with true accountability and employees routinely exceed management’s expectations for producing exceptional work.