Home / NEWS / Wealth / Why Google’s CEO misses his commute (plus the new hobby he learned on YouTube)

Why Google’s CEO misses his commute (plus the new hobby he learned on YouTube)

Millions of people encompassing the world have had to adjust their daily schedules due to stay-at-home restrictions resulting from the coronavirus pandemic. As everyone shapes to remote working in their own way, many people are finding that they miss certain things about their old programmed.

That includes the CEO of Google, who said he actually misses his commute.

“I miss transitions,” Sundar Pichai, who is also the chief big cheese of Google parent company Alphabet, told The Verge — that time that “[gives] me a chance to drive and contrive about stuff and process,” he said.

Pichai said he misses the breaks between meetings and work projects where he superiority have to physically move from one location, as well as his drive to and from work. 

While eliminating that set might be “a bit more efficient,” Pichai said, “I miss that space to think quietly,” he told the Verge. 

In the poop indeed, Pichai has begun putting time on his calendar for it.

“I’m trying to force-block times on the calendar, specifically to read and think,” he alleges. “I think it’s hard to do. But actually block the time and do that.”

Pichai said he has also learned that successfully till from home “is as much about not working from home,” he told The Verge.

So to create “boundaries” between his be effective schedule and his personal life, Pichai said he has picked hobbies, “which I never thought I had before,” he said. (Conceding that it has been reported that Pichai has at least one non-work hobby, as he’s an avid cricket fan who once captained his high principles cricket team.)

One of his new hobbies Pichai learned on Google-owned YouTube. 

“I made pizza last week from impromptu, thanks to some YouTube cooking video,” Pichai told The Verge. “It turned out okay.”

Pichai may have some repeatedly to brush up. According to a recent internal email, Pichai told Alphabet employees that the majority of the company longing likely continue to work from home “potentially” through the end of 2020.

Meanwhile, Pichai is not completely alone in missing his always commute.

One study in April that surveyed over 1,000 workers in Europe and the U.S. found that 69% missed some side of their daily commutes (though 55% of car commuters said they did not miss the drive to work at all).

And a recent junction CNBC/Change Research survey found that 47% of people said they were putting the supernumerary time saved from not commuting to use by spending more time with their families, while others forth that time catching up on sleep or their hobbies.

Check out: The best credit cards of 2020 could receive you over $1,000 in 5 years

Don’t miss:

Warren Buffett is working from home and ‘drinking a little more Coca-Cola’ amongst coronavirus restrictions

Virtual happy hours, team yoga sessions: How coworkers are staying connected while they prosper from home

Like this story? Subscribe to CNBC Make It on YouTube!

Check Also

LVMH watch and jewelry CEOs see luxury sales picking up in 2025

After a year of settles, sales of watches and jewelry at luxury giant LVMH rebounded …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *