Early career Early in his career, Schmidt held a series of technical positions with
IT companies including Byzromotti Design,
Bell Labs (in research and development), During his time at Sun, he was the target of two notable
April Fool's Day pranks. In the first, his office was taken apart and rebuilt on a platform in the middle of a pond, complete with a working phone and workstation on the corporate Ethernet network. The next year, a working
Volkswagen Beetle was taken apart and re-assembled in his office.
Novell In April 1997, Schmidt became the CEO and chairman of the board of
Novell. He presided over a period of decline at Novell where its
IPX protocol was being replaced by open TCP/IP products, while at the same time Microsoft was shipping free TCP/IP stacks in Windows 95, making Novell much less profitable. In 2001, he departed after the acquisition of
Cambridge Technology Partners. they recruited Schmidt to run their company in 2001 under the guidance of
venture capitalists
John Doerr and
Michael Moritz. In March 2001, Schmidt joined Google's board of directors as chair, and became the company's CEO in August 2001. At Google, Schmidt shared responsibility for Google's daily operations with founders Page and Brin. Prior to the Google
initial public offering, Schmidt had responsibilities typically assigned to the CEO of a public company and focused on the management of the vice presidents and the sales organization. According to Google, Schmidt's job responsibilities included "building the corporate infrastructure needed to maintain Google's rapid growth as a company and on ensuring that quality remains high while the product development cycle times are kept to a minimum." Upon being hired at Google, Eric Schmidt was paid a salary of $250,000 and an annual performance bonus. He was granted 14,331,703 shares of Class B common stock at $0.30 per share and 426,892 shares of Series C preferred stock at purchase price of $2.34. In 2004, Schmidt and the Google founders agreed to a base
salary of US$1 (which continued through 2010) with other compensation of $557,465 in 2006, $508,763 in 2008, and $243,661 in 2009. He did not receive any additional stock or options in 2009 or 2010. Most of his compensation was for "personal security" and charters of private aircraft. In its 2011 'World's Billionaires' list,
Forbes ranked Schmidt as the 136th-richest person in the world, with an estimated wealth of $7 billion. On January 20, 2011, Google announced that Schmidt would step down as the CEO of Google but would take new title as executive chairman of the company and act as an adviser to co-founders Page and Brin. Google gave him a $100 million equity award in 2011 when he stepped down as CEO. On April 4, 2011, Page replaced Schmidt as the CEO. On December 21, 2017, Schmidt announced he would be stepping down as the executive chairman of Alphabet. Schmidt stated that "
Larry,
Sergey,
Sundar and I all believe that the time is right in Alphabet's evolution for this transition." In February 2020, Schmidt left his post as technical advisor of Alphabet after 19 years with the company.
Department of Defense In March 2016, it was announced that Schmidt would chair a new advisory board for the Department of Defense, titled the
Defense Innovation Advisory Board. The advisory board serves as a forum connecting mainstays in the technology sector with those in the Pentagon. To avoid potential conflicts of interest within the role, where Schmidt retained his role as technical adviser to Alphabet, and where Google's bidding for the multi-million dollar Pentagon cloud contract, the
Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, was ongoing: Schmidt screened emails and other communications, stating, "'There’s a rule: I'm not allowed to be briefed' about Google or Alphabet business as it relates to the Defense Department". He exited the position November 2020. From 2019 to 2021, Schmidt co-chaired the
National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence with
Robert O. Work.
Role in illegal non-recruiting agreements While working at Google, Schmidt was involved by early 2005 in activities that later became the subject of the
High-Tech Employee Antitrust Litigation case that resulted in a settlement of $415 million paid by
Adobe,
Apple, Google and
Intel to employees. In one March, 2007 incident, after receiving a complaint from
Steve Jobs of Apple, Schmidt sent an email to Google's HR department saying; "I believe we have a policy of no recruiting from Apple and this is a direct inbound request. Can you get this stopped and let me know why this is happening? I will need to send a response back to Apple quickly so please let me know as soon as you can. Thanks Eric". Schmidt's email led to a recruiter for Google being "terminated within the hour" for having adhered to the illegal scheme. Under Schmidt, there was a "Do Not Call list" of companies Google would avoid recruiting from. According to a court filing, another 2005 email exchange shows Google's human resources director asking Schmidt about sharing its no-cold-call agreements with competitors. Schmidt responded that he preferred it be shared "verbally[,] since I don't want to create a paper trail over which we can be sued later?"
Apple On August 28, 2006, Schmidt was elected to
Apple Inc.'s board of directors, a position he held until August 2009.
Broad Institute Schmidt was chairman of the board of directors at
Broad Institute from 2021 until 2025.
Other ventures Schmidt sat on the boards of trustees of
Carnegie Mellon University and
Princeton University. Schmidt serves on the boards of the
Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, the
Khan Academy, and
The Economist.
New America is a non-profit public-policy institute and think tank, founded in 1999. Schmidt succeeded founding chairman
James Fallows in 2008 and served as chairman until 2016. Schmidt runs the
family office Hillspire, which was founded in 2006. The business has invested in more than 22 AI firms since 2019, and is the number-one ranked family office as of 2026. Founded in 2010 by Schmidt and Dror Berman, Innovation Endeavors is an early-stage
venture capital firm. The fund, based in
Palo Alto, California, invested in companies such as
Mashape,
Uber,
Quixey,
Gogobot,
BillGuard, and
Formlabs. In July 2020, Schmidt started working with the U.S. government to create a tech college as part of an initiative to educate future coders, cyber-security experts and scientists. In August 2020, Schmidt launched the podcast
Reimagine with Eric Schmidt. In December 2021, Schmidt joined
Chainlink Labs as a strategic advisor. In October 2022, he co-authored a piece titled "America Could Lose the Tech Contest With China" for
Foreign Affairs with Ylli Bajraktari, former executive director of the U.S.
National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence. In March 2023, Schmidt testified at a
U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Accountability hearing regarding AI. He invests in startups that develop military technologies including Rebellion Defense, Istari, Swift Beat, and White Stork, which developed the
Merops counterdrone system. In June 2023, Schmidt also invested in Keeta, a startup developing a cross-border payments platform using proprietary ledger technology. In 2022, Schmidt was appointed to the
National Security Commission on Emerging Biotechnology, a legislative commission charged with making policy recommendations to Congress and the Executive Branch. Schmidt has been the chairman of
SandboxAQ, a Palo Alto-based quantum computing and AI company that spun off from
Alphabet Inc. in 2022. In 2023, Schmidt was a part of an investment group led by
Josh Harris that purchased the
Washington Commanders, an American football team belonging to the
National Football League (NFL), for $6.05 billion. In March 2025, Schmidt took over as CEO of
Relativity Space, an aerospace manufacturing company, after acquiring a controlling stake in the company. for the DoD.|335x335px == Political activity ==