Mo Gawdat

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Mo Gawdat
Born (1967-06-20) 20 June 1967 (age 54)
Nationality Egypt
Alma materMaastricht School of Management
OccupationAuthor
Entrepreneur

Mohammad "Mo" Gawdat (Arabic: محمد جودت) is an Egyptian entrepreneur. He is the former chief business officer for Google X and author of the book Solve for Happy.[1][2]

Career[]

Gawdat’s background is as an engineer, paired with an MBA degree from Maastricht School of Management in the Netherlands.

He has a career of 27 years, starting at IBM Egypt as a systems engineer before moving to a sales role in the government sector.[citation needed] Moving to the United Arab Emirates, he joined NCR Abu Dhabi to cover the non-finance sector.[citation needed] He then became regional manager of BAT.[citation needed] At Microsoft, he assumed various roles over a span of seven and a half years; in his last role at Microsoft, he headed the communications sector across emerging markets worldwide.[citation needed]

Gawdat joined Google in 2007 to start its business in Emerging Markets.[citation needed]

In 2013, he moved to Google’s innovation arm, Google X, where he led the business strategy, planning, sales, business development, and partnerships.[citation needed] The business team under Gawdat’s leadership has designed innovative business models analogous to the disruptive technologies Google X creates and has created deep partnerships and global deals that enabled Google X to thrive and build products fit for the real world.[citation needed]

Alongside his career, Mo remained a serial entrepreneur who has cofounded more than 20 businesses in fields such as health and fitness, food and beverage and real estate.[citation needed] He served as a board member in several technology, health and fitness and consumer goods companies as well as several government technology and innovation boards in the Middle East and Eastern Europe.[citation needed] He mentors tens of start-ups at any point in time.[citation needed]

Gawdat is the author of Solve for Happy: Engineering Your Path to Joy (2017). Dedicated to his son Ali who died in 2014, the book outlines methods for managing and preventing disappointment.[3] It draws from a number of different philosophies and religions, although Buddhism, Stoicism and Mindfulness are central tenets.[citation needed] The book also covers Gawdat's adherence to monotheism and controversially advocates intelligent design over evolutionary theory, making claims that the time required for random mutations to create complex organisms being too large to be considered a likely cause.[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ Blair, Olivia. "One man's mathematical formula for happiness", The Independent, April 11, 2017.
  2. ^ Tucker, Ian (2017-04-30). "Google's Mo Gawdat: 'Happiness is like keeping fit. You have to work out'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-05-11.
  3. ^ Joung, Frank (2017-12-19). "Formel für Zufriedenheit "Glück ist, wenn das Gehirn die Klappe hält"". Spiegel Online (in German). Retrieved 2017-12-22.

Further reading[]

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