Article: Google's Darren Thayre on the human side of innovation—and what often goes wrong
About Us • Contact Us
People Matters
People Matters Logo
Login / Signup
People Matters Logo
Login / Signup
  • Current
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Research
  • Podcast
  • Videos
  • Webinars

© Copyright People Matters Media All Rights Reserved.

 

 

  • HotTopic
    HR Folk Talk
  • Strategy
    Leadership Csuite StrategicHR EmployeeRelations
  • Recruitment
    Employer Branding Appointments Recruitment
  • Performance
    Skilling PerformanceMgmt Compensation Benefits L&D Employee Engagement
  • Culture
    Culture Life@Work Diversity
  • Tech
    Technology HR Technology Funding & Investment Startups
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Feedback
  • Write For Us

Follow us:

Privacy Policy • Terms of Use

© Copyright People Matters Media All Rights Reserved.

People Matters Logo
  • Current
  • Top Stories
  • News
  • Research
  • Podcast
  • Videos
  • Webinars
Login / Signup

Categories:

  • HotTopic
    HR Folk Talk
  • Strategy
    Leadership Csuite StrategicHR EmployeeRelations
  • Recruitment
    Employer Branding Appointments Recruitment
  • Performance
    Skilling PerformanceMgmt Compensation Benefits L&D Employee Engagement
  • Culture
    Culture Life@Work Diversity
  • Tech
    Technology HR Technology Funding & Investment Startups
Google's Darren Thayre on the human side of innovation—and what often goes wrong

Story • Today • 3 Min Read

Google's Darren Thayre on the human side of innovation—and what often goes wrong

Technology#Innovation#PeopleFirst#Humanscope

Author: Anjum Khan Anjum Khan
24 Reads
Watch the video for the wholehearted conversation on new ways of working, Gen Z workers, CEOs role in innovation, and common pitfalls of innovation journey.

“At Google, there are many ways to innovate, everyone is expected to be an innovator — it’s baked into the DNA” said Darren Thayre, Director of Innovation and AI Pursuit Lead at Google. 

This conversation played out in the latest episode of Humanscope Podcast by People Matters, where our CEO and co-founder, Pushkaraj Bidwai, delved deeper into how innovation happens at Google and where most companies fail, with Thayre.

How Innovation happens..

“Google has a strong belief (deeply resonated by our CEO Sundar) that we have a responsibility as Google to give back, to help industries evolve and transform,” said Thayre as he shared the secret sauce of Google’s transformation journey. 

Adding, “And I want to be clear: we’re not perfect. We’ve learned a lot from things that didn’t work and had to adapt. We’re never complacent. Much of our work starts with acknowledging what we got wrong or what we thought was true but had to pivot away from — and we share that openly.”

Supporting innovation through people

He also shared the projects and well-known publications at Google, studying high-performance teams and other dynamics. “We study what works, what doesn’t, and we’re open about sharing that. On the technology side, we’ve always championed open-source. We apply the same philosophy on the people and learning side: share what works, what doesn’t, and how we’re structured.”

“We’re not a consulting firm, but we believe we can offer something distinct and valuable.”

Getting hired by Google is hard, but if one is successful, the first thing you learn is the company’s heritage — how Google has built products used by billions of people. “You’re told upfront: we must constantly disrupt — ourselves, our products, our business. We have to remain humble, and we must respect the opportunity, the end customer, and each other.”

“There’s a huge focus on the human element. If we focus on great teaming, set big, audacious goals, and think 10x — not just 1x, 2x, or 3x — the ideas might sound outrageous at first. But the greatest innovations often did,” he added. “There’s a strong focus on diversity and serving everyone — not just a narrow slice of the world. And we stay humble, because if we don’t disrupt ourselves, someone else will.”

Innovation needs great work‘space’ 

“When you’re truly trying to innovate, there’s something powerful about human beings being in a room together. I’ve learned this even more since I’ve been in Asia. Before this, I spent a decade in the Middle East, so I’ve been fortunate to work with diverse cultures—it’s been an incredible learning experience,”

“When you’re (working) physically together, you pick up on subtle human elements that just don’t come through on a video call. People open up more…But if you have a high-trust team, you absolutely can work from anywhere for certain tasks. The key is figuring out the right cadence for coming back together.”

“Office design also plays a huge role now. Google, perhaps more than most, has been ahead of the curve here. You want people to want to come to the office—take pride in it. You need great spaces for formal, informal, and impromptu interactions.”

Google is often pointed out for its lavish offices, “but there’s a purpose behind that. It’s about giving people pride in where they work, and creating many ways to engage.”

That said, “employers need to be careful about forcing people back—it can feel draconian. Those that get the messaging right will win, especially in a talent-driven market. It’s important that the messaging doesn’t feel like it’s just coming from HR—it needs to feel like it comes from the CEO's vision and spirit.”

You may also like:

  • Abu Dhabi Labour Court orders private company to pay AED110.4K to employee - Here's why
  • No expat exit without a permit? Here's why Kuwait is drawing human rights criticism
  • MoHRE announces full Unemployment Insurance Scheme of up to AED 20K; Check details here
  • Microsoft layoffs 2025: Thousands in sales and customer support to be affected
  • What HR & risk teams must know about crisis management in a volatile world

Watch the video for the wholehearted conversation on new ways of working, Gen Z workers, CEOs role in innovation, and common pitfalls of innovation journey.

Read More

Did you find this article helpful?


You Might Also Like

Why tech transformations fail?

STORY • 23rd May 2025 • 5 Min Read

Why tech transformations fail?

SkillingTechnology#WorkTech#Artificial Intelligence
The most in-demand tech at work for Employees

STORY • 21st May 2025 • 5 Min Read

The most in-demand tech at work for Employees

SkillingTechnology#WorkTech#Artificial Intelligence
AI tools for employee productivity & experience

STORY • 12th May 2025 • 5 Min Read

AI tools for employee productivity & experience

Technology#WorkTech#EmployeeExperience#Artificial Intelligence
NEXT STORY: No expat exit without a permit? Here's why Kuwait is drawing human rights criticism

Trending Stories

  • design-thinking-hr

    Leadership change at R&M; Roger Baumann takes over as new CE...

  • design-thinking-hr

    Google's Darren Thayre on the human side of innovation—and...

  • design-thinking-hr

    Awad Al-Omari joins Almana Medical Group as Chief Executive ...

  • design-thinking-hr

    Abu Dhabi Labour Court orders private company to pay AED110....

People Matters Logo

Follow us:

Join our mailing list:

By clicking “Subscribe” button above, you are accepting our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Company:

  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Contact:

  • Contact Us
  • Feedback
  • Write For Us

© Copyright People Matters Media All Rights Reserved.

Get the latest News, Insights & Trends from the world of people and work. Subscribe now!
People Matters Logo

Welcome Back!

or

Enter your registered email address to login

Not a user yet? Lets get you signed up!

A 5 digit OTP has been sent to your email address.

This is so we know it's you. Haven't received it yet? Resend the email or then change your email ID.

People Matters Logo

Welcome! Let's get you signed up...

Starting with the absolulte basics.

Already a user? Go ahead and login!

A 5 digit OTP has been sent to your email address.

This is so we know it's you. Haven't received it yet? Resend the email or then change your email ID.

Let's get to know you better

Be assured your information is confidential with us and we'll never share it with third parties.

And lastly...

Your official designation and company name.