Following
on yesterday’s
post that harks back to the world of corporate recruiting, I was interested
by this story in the Wall Street Journal
about the possibly
parlous state of tech companies’ health.
It
posits that you may be able to predict whether these enterprises are doing well
by checking on the state of sales of ping pong tables. One of the examples used
to illustrate the point comes from Twitter, which was apparently buying table
tennis equipment like it was going out of style until a year ago. Then bupkis,
followed by last quarter’s poor performance.
It’s
a clichĂ©—but a largely true one—that tech companies (especially those on the
start-up side of their growth) in the Valley They Call Silicon ply their
engineers with “free”
food and games that they refer to as benefits. “Come work for [insert
Disruptive Tech Name here] and get catered dinners, Foosball and the use of
noise-cancelling headsets!”
Good
health coverage and retirement plans—not so much.
(And
if these kinds of enticement look good to you, just consider what they mean. The
first two are indicative that they expect you to be around every night for those dinners, and that you’re supposed to unkink
your computer-focused vision without actually leaving the premises. Although
you will have to go outside if you
want to call your gynecologist because of the open-plan office, which is why
they’re giving you the headsets.)
The
mindset as articulated by the CTO at Lithium Technologies is indeed there: having
the ping pong table (or whatever is the game-du-jour) validates your
credentials as a thought-leader ninja rockstar serial entrepreneur. Like all
the other thought-leader ninja rockstar serial entrepreneurs. It’s part of the
whole package that you present to VCs and technology journalists.
I
question the correlation between their purchase and predictions about a company’s
financial performance. I mean—at some point, don’t you hit ping pong
saturation? Not only are they rather large (9’ x 5’), but you also need space
around them to actually play. So after the first two or three—what are you
going to do?
As
for the CMO with his $100 paddle in its special bag—well, that’s more an
indicator of individual arrogance and excess than of corporate success.
But
that’s the Valley for you.
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