Eileen Naughton, Head Of HR At Google, Is Stepping Down - Vox

Skip to main contentThe homepageVoxVox logo
  • Explainers
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Advice
  • ListenAudio
  • WatchVideo
MenuThe homepageVoxVox logoNavigation DrawercloseCloseSearch
  • VideoWatch
  • AudioListen
  • CrosswordPlay
  • Explainers
  • Politics
  • Culture
  • Advice
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Health
  • Money
  • Life
  • Future Perfect
  • Newsletters
Become a Member
  • Login / Sign Up
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • RSS
  • TikTok
VoxVox logoGoogle’s head of HR is stepping down, but that won’t fix the company’s internal problems

Believe that journalism can make a difference

If you believe in the work we do at Vox, please support us by becoming a member. Our mission has never been more urgent. But our work isn’t easy. It requires resources, dedication, and independence. And that’s where you come in.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Support Vox
  • Technology
Google’s head of HR is stepping down, but that won’t fix the company’s internal problems

Eileen Naughton is stepping down as many at the company continue to criticize the search giant for not listening to workers’ concerns.

by Shirin Ghaffary

Feb 11, 2020, 10:10 PM UTC
  • Facebook
  • Link
Google head of HR Eileen Naughton standing and speaking at a podium.Google head of HR Eileen Naughton standing and speaking at a podium.
Google’s head of HR, Eileen Naughton, is stepping down from her role.
Eamonn M. McCormack/Getty Images for Advertising Week EuropeShirin GhaffaryShirin Ghaffary is a senior Vox correspondent covering the social media industry. Previously, Ghaffary worked at BuzzFeed News, the San Francisco Chronicle, and TechCrunch.

Eileen Naughton, who oversaw Google’s HR department during a time of intense controversy around how the search giant treats its employees, is stepping down.

Executive leadership changes happen at major companies all the time — but at Google, Naughton’s move is notable because she was a key figure responsible for dealing with an unprecedented level of internal employee turmoil and dissent. In recent years, Google workers feuded among themselves and with management over issues ranging from the company’s alleged mishandling of executive sexual harassment cases to its crackdown on employee speech in the workplace. Naughton is also the fourth long-tenured Google executive, including the company’s cofounders, to step down from an executive position or resign altogether in recent months.

But Naughton, who has worked at Google for 13 years and oversaw the People Operations team (what Google calls HR), says she’s stepping down for personal reasons, to be closer to her family in New York. Fortune first reported the move, which Google confirmed to Recode.

“My husband and I have decided — after six years on the road, first in London and now San Francisco — to return home to New York to be closer to our family,” Naughton wrote in a statement that Google sent to Recode. “I’m at the very beginning of the process, and wanted to let everyone know upfront, as I’ll be working with Sundar and Ruth to find a great leader for the People Operations team.”

Google’s leadership praised Naughton’s accomplishments. Google shared the following statement from Alphabet (Google’s parent company) CEO Sundar Pichai: “Over the past 13 years, Eileen has made major contributions to the company in numerous areas, from media partnerships, to leading our sales and operations in the UK and Ireland, to leading our People Operations team through a period of significant growth — during which over 70,000 people started their careers at Google. We’re grateful to Eileen for all she’s done and look forward to her next chapter at Google.”

Under Naughton’s leadership, Google’s radically open culture of letting employees freely debate controversial topics — including those involving the company itself — changed. Management has limited employees’ opportunity to publicly ask leadership tough questions; it’s instituted stricter rules around what workers can say on internal message boards; and it’s fired employee activists who were openly critical about the company’s contentious projects, such as its contracts with US immigration agencies. (Google denies they were let go for political reasons.)

Software engineers have historically thought of Google as a dream employer. That’s not just because of its competitive pay and prestige as a top tech giant but because it encouraged employees to publicly debate their opinions, no matter how controversial. Some employees have criticized or even left Google over what they view as a radical departure from that ethos.

Do you work at Amazon and have thoughts on what’s going on? Please email Shirin Ghaffary at shirin.ghaffary@protonmail.com or Jason Del Rey at jasondelrey@protonmail.com to reach them confidentially. Signal numbers available upon request by email.

It’s unclear exactly what role Naughton played in shaping these culture and policy shifts, but she played a key role in implementing them. Some Google employees and former employees questioned whether she’s a scapegoat for what they perceive as mismanagement at the company. But either way, her role shift is a sign that Google’s leadership is changing, at the same time that it’s facing intense criticism from its employees over decisions ranging from paying out multimillion-dollar exit packages to executives accused of sexual harassment by employees to building a (now paused) censored search product in China to attempts to shut down talks of unionization. The company has also faced criticism from a small group of conservative employees who say they were punished for voicing their political beliefs.

Several employee activists welcomed the news of Naughton stepping down but argued that it won’t solve the company’s problems around how it treats employees.

“She oversaw a significant crackdown on legally protected worker organizing, and it’s great that she’s stepping down,” said Meredith Whittaker, a former Google employee activist who now leads the AI Now Institute. “But she’s not the problem. The problem is a company that puts the interests of shareholders and executives over equity and the safe and ethical application of its technologies.”

Google has repeatedly denied limiting legally protected workplace speech and is currently the subject of an investigation by the National Labor Relations Board related to four employees Google recently fired who were involved in workplace activism.

“Like every workplace, we have rules to safeguard business and customer information, and to protect our employees,” a spokesperson for the company sent in a statement. “Disagreeing with business decisions does not give people a free pass to violate those rules. If you breach our policies, as some former employees clearly and repeatedly did, we take appropriate action to protect fellow employees, users and customers.”

It’s worth noting Naughton wasn’t head of HR at Google when the most well-known cases of alleged executive sexual misconduct took place there, such as when the creator of Android mobile software, Andy Rubin, allegedly sexually coerced an employee (which Rubin denies), and was reportedly paid $90 million in a severance package. Since 2016, the company says it has fired 48 employees for sexual harassment and given them no exit packages, and that it has improved its processes for reporting such issues. The company also ended forced arbitration, a practice that prevents workers from taking their employer to court, for all full-time employees. But the company has continued to face internal criticism for allegedly retaliating against employees who report workplace harassment cases, as Recode has reported — under Naughton’s watch.

Naughton has established some workplace standards for US temporary staff and contractors who work on behalf of Google, including requiring their direct employers to pay a $15 minimum wage and provide health care, according to a spokesperson for the company. Yet many of these third-party contractors are still bound under third-party arbitration agreements, which prevent them from taking their employer to court over issues like discrimination or harassment.

Ultimately, the company has yet to fully address many of the alleged systemic issues employees have raised in the past few years. Naughton’s departure isn’t going to change that — but it is a sign that times are changing at the top at Google.

You’ve read 1 article in the last month

Here at Vox, we're unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you — threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.

Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.

We rely on readers like you — join us.

Swati Sharma

Swati Sharma

Vox Editor-in-Chief

MembershipMonthlyAnnualOne-time$5/month$10/month$25/month$50/monthOther$50/year$100/year$150/year$200/yearOther$25$50$100$250OtherJoin for $10/month

We accept credit card, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. You can also contribute via

See More:
  • Big Tech
  • Google
  • Technology

Most Popular

  1. A whole new thing that could end the world
  2. The huge stakes in a new Supreme Court case about pornography
  3. Are men’s reading habits truly a national crisis?
  4. Take a mental break with the newest Vox crossword
  5. Sign up for Vox’s daily newsletter

Today, Explained

Understand the world with a daily explainer plus the most compelling stories of the day.

Email (required)Sign UpBy submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Advertiser Content FromSponsor Logo

This is the title for the native ad

Sponsor thumbnail

More in Technology

Trump and Musk actually made a good point on immigrationTrump and Musk actually made a good point on immigration25 things we think will happen in 202525 things we think will happen in 2025TikTok is headed for a ban — but can Trump still save it?TikTok is headed for a ban — but can Trump still save it?The 14 predictions that came true in 2024 — and the 10 that didn’tThe 14 predictions that came true in 2024 — and the 10 that didn’t9 actually good things that happened in 20249 actually good things that happened in 2024The 10(ish) most read Future Perfect stories of 2024The 10(ish) most read Future Perfect stories of 2024Trump and Musk actually made a good point on immigrationTrump and Musk actually made a good point on immigrationPolitics3 minutes agoTrump and Musk actually made a good point on immigration

The US does need more skilled workers. But that’s not all it needs.

By Eric Levitz25 things we think will happen in 202525 things we think will happen in 2025Future PerfectJan 225 things we think will happen in 2025

From tariffs and a Trump/Elon break-up to artificial general intelligence, here’s what could happen in 2025, according to the Future Perfect team.

By Dylan Matthews, Bryan Walsh and 4 moreTikTok is headed for a ban — but can Trump still save it?TikTok is headed for a ban — but can Trump still save it?PoliticsDec 30, 2024TikTok is headed for a ban — but can Trump still save it?

The four ways Trump could potentially preserve the app.

By Li ZhouThe 14 predictions that came true in 2024 — and the 10 that didn’tThe 14 predictions that came true in 2024 — and the 10 that didn’tFuture PerfectDec 30, 2024The 14 predictions that came true in 2024 — and the 10 that didn’t

The 24 forecasts we made in 2024, revisited.

By Bryan Walsh, Dylan Matthews and 4 more9 actually good things that happened in 20249 actually good things that happened in 2024Future PerfectDec 26, 20249 actually good things that happened in 2024

It wasn’t the easiest year, but 2024 was not without its bright spots.

By Bryan WalshThe 10(ish) most read Future Perfect stories of 2024The 10(ish) most read Future Perfect stories of 2024Future PerfectDec 24, 2024The 10(ish) most read Future Perfect stories of 2024

Why young people are getting cancer, problems with OpenAI, and the little intelligence agency that could.

By Bryan WalshAdvertiser Content FromSponsor Logo

This is the title for the native ad

Từ khóa » Hr Director Google