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Here's why Google went to Burning Man to find its next CEO

The founders of Google used Burning Man as a stage for interviewing the next CEO.

The founders of Google used Burning Man as a stage for interviewing the company's future CEO, Eric Schmidt.
  • Sergey Brin and Larry Page, the cofounders of Google, went to Burning Man with Eric Schmidt nearly two decades ago to see if he had what it takes to become CEO.
  • Schmidt landed the job because he proved he could cut loose.
  • The company announced on December 21, 2017 that Schmidt is stepping down as executive chairman of Alphabet, Google's parent company.
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It's no secret that Burning Man is a stomping ground for tech moguls. The counterculture gathering draws rich people and naked hippies under the shared assumption that the future is what you make it.

In his book, "Stealing Fire," author and performance expert Steven Kotler explains how the founders of Google — Larry Page and Sergey Brin — found their CEO at Burning Man.

On Thursday, Google's parent company Alphabet announced that Eric Schmidt is stepping down as executive chairman of Alphabet. The change will be effective in January 2018.

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"From the very beginning, Larry and Sergey have been kind of rabid attendees. The center atrium at Google for years was decorated with pictures of Googlers at Burning Man, spinning fire, doing various things," Kotler told Business Insider.

Part of what appealed to the duo about Burning Man was the sense of community at its core.

"So one of the things that happens at Burning Man — and there's recent research out of Oxford that sort of backs this up — is that Burning Man alters consciousness in a very particular way and it drops people into a state of group flow," Kotler said.

"Flow is a peak-performance state," he continued. " It's an individual performing at their peak. Group flow is simply a team performing at their peak, and everybody has some familiarity with this. If you've ever taken part in a great brainstorming session, where ideas are kind of bouncing everywhere — you're really reaching ripe, smart conclusions. If you've seen a fourth-quarter comeback in football. ... That's group flow in action."

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According to Kotler, Google relies on creating group-flow states to get the best work out of their employees.

In 1999, Page and Brin raised $12.5 million from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a top VC firm in Silicon Valley. As part of the deal, they promised the firm they would hire an outsider to replace Page as CEO — a common play to provide "adult supervision" to young founders.

They wanted the next CEO to be in harmony with these group-flow states. But they didn't really know how to screen for it. Then they met Schmidt, then-CEO of software company Novell.

This is a portrait I shot o... @ young.edit

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Schmidt took the CEO spot in 2001 — a hire that Page would later describe as "brilliant" — and became executive chairman in 2011. In 2018, Schmidt will take on a new role as a technical advisor to Alphabet. The company expects to replace him with a non-executive chairman.

Joe Avella and Kevin Reilly contributed reporting to a previous version of this article.

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