Source: Apple Aggressively Recruiting Ex-Google Maps Staff To Build Out iOS Maps

Apple is going after people with experience working on Google Maps to develop its own product, according to a source with connections on both teams. Using recruiters, Apple is pursuing a strategy of luring away Google Maps employees who helped develop the search giant’s product on contract, and many of those individuals seem eager to accept due in part to the opportunity Apple represents to build new product, instead of just doing “tedious updates” on a largely complete platform.

My source — a contractor who worked on Google Maps as part of a massive undertaking to integrate Street View and newly licensed third-party data to improve European coverage, as well as develop the platform’s turn-by-turn navigation — says that when attention turned to indoor mapping, things started to become less interesting and a lot of staff began looking around for other opportunities. That turned out to be good timing for Cupertino. Here’s what my source describes happening around that time:

Many of my coworkers at Google Maps eventually left when their contracts ended or on their own accord. One guy looked around for other GIS work and ended up at Apple when a recruiter contacted him. He had heard rumors for a while that Apple was going to develop its own in-house mapping platform, and given his experience at Google, he was an easy hire. Apple went out of their way to bring him down to Cupertino and he’s now paid hansomly as a GIS Analyst. Another coworker that was a project lead at Google Maps, left for the East Coast after his contract ended, and was recently contacted by an Apple recruiter. The position sounds like a product development manager position, and will pay him $85k+ and all the moving expenses from the East Coast. He’s gone through 2 rounds of interview and seems like a frontrunner to land that position.

The interest in ex-Googlers is well-placed, he says, and it does seem like Apple is actively looking for more talent to add to its team, according to recent job listings the company has posted. And while there’s a tough road ahead for Apple playing catch-up in this area, my source believes that the possibility of building a platform that truly competes with Google Maps is well within reach for Apple.

Apple has a lot of catching up to do if it wants to build a robust mapping platform to counter Google Maps, so it doesn’t surprise me that it’s going out of its way to lure former and current Google Maps employees. At Google Maps, we know what data’s important, rendering priorities, keyword searches, and how the user experience is suppose to be. However, Apple needs to find a way to get its own 5 million miles of street view data, partner with the right folks, and spend a fortune on licensed data – which it can.

Via: TechCrunch

Prateek Panda

Prateek is the Founder of TheTechPanda. He's passionate about technology startups and entrepreneurship and enjoys speaking to new founders every day. Prateek has also been consistently regarded as one of the top marketing experts in the region.

Recent Posts

SIA-India pre-budget submission urges satellite backbone to empower 40,000 connectivity-fragile Gram Panchayats

SatCom Industry Association (SIA-India) has called for the launch of a National Satellite Connectivity Mission…

9 hours ago

Telangana’s bold future: Anand Mahindra hails people-centric vision at Rising Global Summit 2025

At the Telangana Rising Global Summit 2025, industrialist Anand Mahindra, who is the Chairman of…

10 hours ago

RBI slashes repo rate, injects $16B liquidity: Experts decode India’s ‘Goldilocks’ economy

The Reserve Bank of India cut its key repo rate and left the door open for further…

14 hours ago

Outbound & inbound: Indian EdTech launches in US while US companies penetrate Indian markets like HCM, cleantech, AI & green finance

The Tech Panda takes a look at how Indian companies are launching in the US…

15 hours ago

M&A: The art of the deal

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent mergers and acquisitions within various tech ecosystems…

6 days ago

How India’s smaller towns are driving the next big wave of AI classroom adoption

For decades, India’s education narrative has been dominated by metro cities—Bangalore, Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad. These…

6 days ago