Larry Page takes over as CEO of Google today, with Eric Schmidt moving into the role of chairman.
    
    
 Schmidt later said he would "focus wherever I can add the greatest  value: externally, on the deals, partnerships, customers and broader  business relationships, government outreach and technology thought  leadership that are increasingly important given Google's global reach;  and internally as an advisor to Larry and Sergey."
Schmidt later said he would "focus wherever I can add the greatest  value: externally, on the deals, partnerships, customers and broader  business relationships, government outreach and technology thought  leadership that are increasingly important given Google's global reach;  and internally as an advisor to Larry and Sergey."
    
    
    
The  switch has been several months in the making; the company announced  plans for the transition in January. Sergey Brin will continue on as  co-founder.
    At the time, Schmidt said "Larry, Sergey, and I have been talking for  a long time about how best to simplify our management structure and  speed up decision making." Going forward, the trio "will continue to  discuss the big decisions among the three of us." But January's  announcement clarified their individual roles "so there's clear  responsibility and accountability at the top of the company," Schmidt  said.
 Schmidt later said he would "focus wherever I can add the greatest  value: externally, on the deals, partnerships, customers and broader  business relationships, government outreach and technology thought  leadership that are increasingly important given Google's global reach;  and internally as an advisor to Larry and Sergey."
Schmidt later said he would "focus wherever I can add the greatest  value: externally, on the deals, partnerships, customers and broader  business relationships, government outreach and technology thought  leadership that are increasingly important given Google's global reach;  and internally as an advisor to Larry and Sergey."Last month, there were rumors  he would take that government outreach directly to the cabinet as  President Barack Obama's secretary of commerce, but no announcements  have been made.
Google did not respond to a request for a comment about Page's move  to CEO today, and the new Google chief does not have a presence on  social-networking sites like Twitter or Facebook. But according to The Guardian,  Page has been planning for the move for the past three months. He has  reportedly asked for concise overviews of current projects, toured the  company, and requested peoples' undivided attention at meetings. He is  also pushing clear strategies for upcoming projects and a focus on data,  The Guardian said.
As the paper notes, antitrust issues will also be on Page's mind. Last week, Microsoft formally joined  the EU antitrust complaint against Google, accusing the search giant of  restricting access to YouTube, content from book publishers, advertiser  data, and more.
 
 
 
  

 
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