Google: OMID KORDESTANI/Mountain View, Calif.
Eve
When Kordestani, 40, joined Google from Netscape four years ago, search engines were a hard sell. But he avoided pushy pop-up ads and intrusive banners and began to sell paid listings. It's a simple yet effective method, perfected by rival Overture. Sponsors pay for the rights to keywords: when a user enters a keyword, a related sponsored ad appears alongside the search results. Despite the success of the model, Google insists it's not money obsessed. Kordestani once walked away from a multimillion-dollar deal because he didn't see a smooth fit with the customer. "At Google, a lot of times we actually turn away revenue because we only want quality, repeatable revenue, not just a customer for a quarter," he says.
Among co-workers, he's known as the king of instant messaging. Of the hundreds of employees Kordestani oversees globally, he personally reviews each hire, making sure it passes his airport test: "If I'm stuck in an airport with one of these employees, I want to enjoy my time and have an intelligent conversation."
Miraculously, he's forged an ad strategy that appeals to his bosses, online advertisers and Web purists who love Google's noncommercial look and feel. Ten straight quarters of profitability isn't bad either.
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