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  1. NTU Theses and Dissertations Repository
  2. 管理學院
  3. 商學組
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://tdr.lib.ntu.edu.tw/jspui/handle/123456789/101834
Title: Google 飲食計畫之策略分析及其 對台灣組織文化的影響
More Than a Free Lunch: A Strategic Analysis of Google's Food Program and its Perceived Impact on Organizational Culture in Taiwan
Authors: 葉昱廷
Yu-Ting Yeh
Advisor: 余峻瑜
Jiun-Yu Yu
Co-Advisor: 吳玲玲
Ling-Ling Wu
Keyword: 策略性人力資源管理,組織文化整體獎酬共食社會交換理論
Strategic Human Resource Management,Organizational CultureTotal RewardsCommensalityNudge TheorySocial Exchange TheoryCasual Collisions
Publication Year : 2026
Degree: 碩士
Abstract: 本論文探討 Google 的全方位餐飲計畫,不將其僅視為可有可無的額外福利,而是台灣科技產業中人力資源管理的策略性工具。藉由對比 Google 創新模式與在地產業領導者的營運方針,本研究評估了該計畫對於組織文化與人才留任的影響。

本研究採用單一個案研究法,綜合分析來自員工調查的資料。研究結果證實,該計畫作為關鍵的Cultural Artifact,成功促成Casual Collisions,進而培育跨部門創新。此外,透過創造能提高轉換成本並降低自願離職率,該計畫亦成為強大的留才機制。

分析顯示出一項顯著的文化差異:與美國同儕相比,台灣員工展現出獨特的評價落差,相對更重視財務薪酬。因此,本研究提出「現金提供保障,福利形塑文化」之框架,主張高投資的福利雖能驅動創新,但必須建立在具競爭力的財務薪酬基礎之上,方能在在地市場發揮成效。
This thesis investigates Google's comprehensive food program not as a discretionary perk, but as a strategic instrument of Human Resource Management within Taiwan’s technology sector. By contrasting Google’s "Innovation Model" with the "Operational Excellence" approach of local industry leaders, the research evaluates the program's perceived impact on organizational culture and talent retention.
Utilizing a qualitative single-case methodology, the study synthesizes primary data from employee surveys. Findings confirm that the program functions as a critical "cultural artifact" that successfully engineers "casual collisions," fostering cross-functional innovation. Furthermore, it serves as a powerful retention mechanism by creating "lifestyle handcuffs" that increase switching costs and reduce voluntary turnover.
However, the analysis reveals a significant cultural nuance: Taiwanese employees exhibit a distinct "valuation gap," placing higher relative importance on financial compensation compared to their US counterparts. Consequently, the study proposes a "Cash for Security, Perks for Culture" framework, arguing that while high-investment perks drive innovation, they must be layered upon competitive financial baselines to be effective in the local market.
URI: http://tdr.lib.ntu.edu.tw/jspui/handle/123456789/101834
DOI: 10.6342/NTU202600328
Fulltext Rights: 同意授權(全球公開)
metadata.dc.date.embargo-lift: 2026-03-05
Appears in Collections:商學組

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