Just adding not all Googlers make that much. I have 7 years in industry, L4, and make 117 base with 40k of stock a year in San Francisco (was 30k at grant time). If you can convince Google you're worth more they will pay it but not all Googlers are making crazy cash (btw wish I was in Seattle given CoL difference).
And not all Googlers make this little. I have the same position, in the bay area, and my pay structure is roughly:
$180k/year
15% bonus ~ $30k/year
600 RSUs in the first year = $440,000
400 RSUs in the second year = $280,000
200 RSUs in 3rd and 4th year (assuming no refreshers, and oh boy there will be refreshers!)
Male, native english speaker.
It helps that my prior job had a comp level around $480k/year and also I got hired when GOOG was $550/share.
BTW, the T-5 salary band ends at $180k. So you're pretty close. Its the RSUs that make all the difference.
But you received an abnormally huge initial RSU grant. It's uncommon for anyone to get more than 500-600 (outside of leadership) unless you're a strategic hire and they're compensating you for unvested stock at your current employer.
Indeed it's high, but also it just shows you what is possible.
I don't think I was a highly strategic hire, just a very solid engineer with a lot of experience, prior employment at Google (and Amazon), and a strong salary and stock compensation at my immediately prior job.
So they busted out the competitive offer, and I was very happy. Also the stock went up like $200 a share.
That's what's vesting this year. It can fluctuate a bit (so far only upwards for me).
Upon hiring and usually each year thereafter we get grants that vest over the following 4 years, varying in sized based on budgets, level & performance scores.
For those of us in the midwest... This compensation package is about 210k$ in Austin. Obviously, outside of expensive cities like Austin/Dallas/Chicago, the equivalent number is lower.
If you're hiring, do you take college students for interviews? I've never been clear about the google hiring process and I've always heard mixed things from people who went through it.
Yes, we hire new grads, and we offer internships for those who are still studying. Successful interns get an easier path for converting to full-time than grads who apply cold.
Getting somebody you know at Google to refer you is the best way to secure an interview, but you can also apply online.
The hiring process is a bit hit and miss. I know people who had a really good experience, and I know people who said it was a shit show. About meeting Googlers: if you happen to come to the Bay Area, you can't throw a rock in any direction without hitting at least one Googler. Not saying throwing rocks is the way to go, but... you'll get someone's attention :P
I've noticed that Google is better than most with online applications. I managed to interview 2 years in a row (intern, college student) having only applied online.
...really? I was under the impression everybody that reads HN would have been around the Google-or-similar hiring circuit at least once. I have twice and I'm not as experienced as you are.
I'm interested in working at the Fremont office. Do you know any ex-Amazonians that are at Google now that I can talk to? I've put an e-mail alias in my profile.
What I mean is, Google does not care about the specific technologies you've worked with if you're joining the company (as long as you've worked with some technologies). E.g. it doesn't matter what databases you've worked with, just that you've worked with databases in general.
Position: Senior Software Engineer (level 5)
Tenure: 4 years, no prior experience
Comp: $300K (160 salary, 40 bonus, 100 stock)
Male, native English speaker
P.S. We're hiring.