Jonathan Rosenberg (technologist)

Jonathan Rosenberg is the former Senior Vice President of Products at Google and current advisor to Alphabet Inc. management team and board.[1]

Jonathan Rosenberg
Born (1961-07-20) July 20, 1961
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Chicago;
Claremont McKenna College

Biography

Jonathan Rosenberg was born to a Jewish family on July 20, 1961.[2] Rosenberg received a Masters of Business Administration degree from the University of Chicago as well as a Bachelor of Arts degree with honors in economics from Claremont McKenna College.[3]

Career

Previous to joining Google, Rosenberg was Vice President of Software for palmOne, a provider of handheld computer and communications solutions.[4] He joined Google in 2002 and oversaw the design and development of the company’s consumer, advertiser, and partner products, including Search, Ads, Gmail, Android, Apps, and Chrome.[5] While at Google, Rosenberg managed many noteworthy employees, including Marissa Mayer.[6] He resigned from his position as SVP in 2011.[7] Prior to joining at Google, Rosenberg worked at @Home, where he was a founding member of the product group and senior vice president of online products and services after @Home merged with Excite.[8] Rosenberg was appointed as the COO of Motorola Mobility, replacing former COO Dennis Woodside, on February 12, 2014.[9]

He is the coauthor, along with Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt and Director of Executive Communications Alan Eagle, of a New York Times best-selling book[10] titled How Google Works, which was published in September, 2014.[11]He also published a book called Trillion Dollar Coach that reached number 1 on Wall Street journal bestseller list and was also “New York Times” bestseller.

Jonathan Rosenberg is featured in an Academy Award-winning documentary about espionage in the digital age.

gollark: (otherwise, this would be horribly exploitable for evilness)
gollark: If you change the license they can just keep using the old version.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: (oh, and to clarify a bit, by "binary" I mean the slightly unixy term for executables, not the binary numeral system)
gollark: And that *also* doesn't stop me from just sticking it on my server and not giving you the binary at all.

References

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