Google is seeking 25 more staff in Australia and New Zealand as a lengthy local and international hiring binge shows no signs of slowing down.

A spokesperson for the search heavyweight told Builder AU sister site ZDNet Australia by e-mail that as at December last year the company had 5,680 employees globally -- a total more than three times greater than just two years before.

The spokesperson declined to reveal Google's Australian headcount, but local hiring has likewise continued at a fast pace, with 25 positions currently on offer in Australia and New Zealand. The company has ramped up its local hiring since ZDNet Australia reported on the situation six months ago.

The company is looking for multiple technical engineers in the areas of information and network security, as well as systems administration and programming.

Google's Australian sales team currently has the most vacant spots, with seven positions on offer. However the operations, product management, marketing, facilities management and human resources branches of Google in Australia are also hiring.

Three positions are available in New Zealand in the areas of sales, client services and copywriting.

But Google's not the only Internet company trying to snap up Australian talent. Yahoo7 -- formed from Yahoo's Australian operations and resources from the Seven Network is advertising for 15 vacant spots, while Microsoft has 10.

Related links

Leave a comment

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

* indicates mandatory fields.

Log in


Sign up | Forgot your password?

  • Staff Aussies to pay more for Win 7

    If you are looking to make some money in these troubled times, perhaps importing copies of Windows 7 could be for you. Read more »

    -- posted by Staff

  • Staff Firefox: Greens want it, 3.5rc2 not up to par

    This week's roundup looks at the situation surrounding a campaign to change Outlook HTML renderer, a Greens MP wants to install Firefox but is restricted and all the photos from the iPhone 3GS launch. Read more »

    -- posted by Staff

  • Chris Duckett Microsoft misses the Outlook point

    Ask designers which mail program is the bane of their existence, and you'll find that Outlook tops the list. The reason why the most popular email reader is also the most painful is simple: it uses Word to render HTML emails. Read more »

    -- posted by Chris Duckett

What's on?