KEY POINTS
  • Google has released new details of its performance system overhaul and it shows employees will more easily fall into lower-rated categories.
  • Employees' questions at a recent all-hands meeting showed a lack of trust in leadership to be forthright with how it handles headcount.
  • Employees said the new system amid industry-wide layoffs has cause "a lot of distress and anger."

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CEO of Alphabet and Google Sundar Pichai during press conference at the Chancellery in Warsaw, Poland on March 29, 2022.

More Google employees will be at risk for low performance ratings and fewer are expected to reach high marks under a new performance review system that starts next year, according to internal communications obtained by CNBC.

In a recent Google all-hands meeting and in a separate presentation last week, executives presented more details of its new performance review process. Under the new system, Google estimates 6% of full-time employees will fall into a low-ranking category that puts them at higher risk for corrective action, versus 2% before. Simultaneously, it will be harder to achieve high marks: Google projects 22% of employees will be rated within one of the two highest categories, versus 27% before.

In this article