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Philipp Schindler on workforce transition

From Jon Kelly in conversation with Philipp Schindler · · Think with Google

“The real question is, how big is x and how big is actually y. And if y is too big, then we have a challenge. This goes back to what we discussed before about what's the net effect. And then we need to have, let's be Frank, a societal discussion about what to do with this and how to help those folks, because there will be a y percent and they will have a challenge in this transition, and they will probably be a struggling in where the world is heading.”

Philipp Schindler
Senior Vice President & Chief Business Officer of Google, Google
Policy Impact workforce transitionsocietal impactAI displacement

On , Philipp Schindler, Senior Vice President & Chief Business Officer of Google at Google, spoke about workforce transition during Jon Kelly in conversation with Philipp Schindler on Think with Google.

Jon Kelly in conversation with Philipp Schindler
Watch on YouTube at 10:58
Jon Kelly in conversation with Philipp Schindler
Think with Google
Watch on YouTube at 10:58
Jon Kelly, co-founder and editor-in-chief at Puck, sits down with Google’s Philipp Schindler to discuss leading in the AI era. At Think with Google, our mission is to educate and inspire the next generation of marketers, advertisers, and creatives. Here, you can find the latest consumer data and insights, marketing tutorials, and perspectives from leaders across the ad industry. Subscribe to our channel and follow along. Looking for even more marketing insights, inspiration, and strategies? Subscribe to get Think with Google straight in your inbox. https://thinkwithgoogle.com/signup
Philipp Schindler

About Philipp Schindler

Senior Vice President & Chief Business Officer of Google · Google

Philipp Schindler, Google’s Chief Business Officer, has been discussing the company’s AI strategy and investment in a series of recent appearances. At Google Marketing Live in May 2026, he described the company’s capital expenditure as “the most ambitious capital investment in our history,” stating that Google is on track to invest $180–190 billion in 2026, up from $31 billion in 2022. He attributed this to a “full stack approach” to AI, covering models, chips, and security, and argued that this investment positions Google as “the best partner” for advertisers. On the April 2026 Alphabet earnings call, he reported that Google Services revenues reached $90 billion for the quarter, up 16% year-on-year, driven by Search growth, and that more than 30% of customers’ search spend now uses AI-enabled campaigns. In a May 2026 conversation with Jon Kelly, Schindler addressed the cultural challenges of AI adoption, stating that “AI is excellent at simplifying and automating tasks, but it does not replace the purpose of a job.” He emphasized that Google is “not interested in a race to the bottom or lowest common denominator price sniping,” asserting that customers value service and loyalty over price alone. At Google Marketing Live, he claimed that “on average, at scale for every $1 you spend on Google Search globally, you get an incremental $6 back,” and described social platforms as “often just capturing intent and stored it in Google and selling it back to you as discovery.”

Profile compiled from Philipp Schindler's verified public interviews and appearances. See all quotes & transcripts →

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