SAN JOSE, Calif. (KGO) -- Silicon Valley may be ahead of the curve as President Barack Obama calls for more job creation. One technology giant is set to hire more people this year than any time in its history, but other challenges remain.
Google is emerging as the poster child for optimism. It is planning to hire more than 6,200 people this year, up from 4,500 last year. That will set a new record for hiring in a single year at Google. Late last year, Google also announced it will give all of its 24,000 employees a 10 percent pay raise in an effort at retain them as start-up's begin to compete for talented engineers and sales staff. That move came with an estimated price tag of $500 million.
That optimism is showing up in research as Joint Venture Silicon Valley Network prepares to update its annual "State of the Valley Report," done in conjunction with the Silicon Valley Community Foundation.
"It looks like maybe we've started to turn the corner on the great recession at least here in Silicon Valley," Joint spokesperson Russell Hancock said. "But having said that, I also need to point out that it's offset by corresponding job losses in the public sector."
Yahoo dampened the outlook Tuesday, announcing the layoff of about 150 people, or 1 percent of its work force. That comes on top of 600 layoffs in December.
Still, CEO Carol Bartz, in an earnings conference call Tuesday, insisted Yahoo is hiring.
"We're going to exit the year with more people and still have flat costs, so we absolutely are hiring, we are going to hire and prioritize ways, but we're watching the cost," she said.
The recruiting firm Robert Half International just surveyed 4,000 CEOs; 8 percent of them in California say they plan to increase hiring between now and April. Aggressive hiring plans by big firms such as Google will trigger smaller companies to hire.
"We're already starting to see that trickle-down effect," Robert Half International are vice president Catrina Simbe said. "The biggest demand we've seen is in professional services, small to mid-sized professional services organizations that already are starting to feel growth, based on the larger companies' increase in hiring."
Seeing an increase in private sector jobs while losing them in the public sector could put pressure on the unemployment rate, not allowing that figure to drop as much as Silicon Valley and Washington would like.
jobs, silicon valley, barack obama, yahoo, google, business
- SF officials prepare for 102nd Bay to Breakers race
- 8th stage of Amgen Tour of California kicks off in SF 26 min ago
- Albany residents protest return of Occupy activists
- Suspicious package in Livermore prompts evacuation
- Pacers knock out Knicks with 106-99 win in Game 6
- Milone's long skid ends as A's beat Royals
- Chatwood leads Rockies past Giants 10-2
- Teen dies after refusing to give iPad to thieves
- Up to 60 injured after car drives into Va. parade
- San Jose man arrested for alleged road rage attack
- Miami Heat player surprises student at prom
- abcnews: Men Struggle With Wives' Breast Cancer
- roundup: America's Cup race; Murder charges
- weather: Bay Area weather forecast for Sunday
-
Most Popular
-
Most Viewed StoriesMost Viewed VideoMost Viewed Photos
- abc7news.com home
- Site Map
- RSS
- Advertise with Us
- Contact Us
- Online Public Inspection File
- Technical Help
- ABC.com
- ABCNews.com
- Privacy Policy
- Interest-Based Ads
- Safety Information for this site
- Terms of Use
- Copyright ©2013 ABC Inc., KGO-TV San Francisco, CA. All Rights Reserved.





