At Google, we put our users first. The world is always changing, so we need Product Managers who are continuously adapting and excited to work on products that affect millions of people every day.
In this role, you will work cross-functionally to guide products from conception to launch by connecting the technical and business worlds. You can break down complex problems into steps that drive product development.
One of the many reasons Google consistently brings innovative, world-changing products to market is because of the collaborative work we do in Product Management. Our team works closely with creative engineers, designers, marketers, etc. to help design and develop technologies that improve access to the world's information. We're responsible for guiding products throughout the execution cycle, focusing specifically on analyzing, positioning, packaging, promoting, and tailoring our solutions to our users.
Google is at a transformative moment as it leverages AI to accelerate corporate functions, and the Finance Procurement organization is highly motivated to transform. The mission of the Procurement Engineering Organization is to transform Google’s procurement from a fragmented, manual "tax" on productivity into an intelligent, autonomous ecosystem that prioritizes speed and compliance. This transformation is anchored in a shift toward an event-driven architecture and a "Digital Workforce" of AI agents, which will move the organization from managing volume to "Intelligent Orchestration".
In this role, you will lead a team of product managers and Business Systems Analysts (BSAs) to drive the product strategy that enables this transformation. This role is highly cross functional, requiring stakeholder management across Corporate Engineering, Core, Finance, Extended Workforce, and Legal teams.
Based on 1,747 disclosed Product salaries on RoleSuite, the role pays a median of $176K/year, with most offers between $144K and $215K (10th–90th percentile: $115K–$252K).
This posting lists $240K–$334K, above the $176K market median.
See the full Product salary breakdown →