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Why nearly 5,000 enthusiastic parents were running around Google's campus this week
TYPTWD
TYPTWD

(Business Insider / Jillian D'Onfro)
The scene on stage at the Shoreline Amphitheatre

On a hot Thursday morning in Mountain View, California, an enormous amphitheater usually crammed with rowdy concert-goers is packed with a very different kind of crowd.

Inside, thousands of Google employees squeeze in next their parents, who are munching the remains of their free breakfasts, sipping from new logo-emblazoned water bottles, and listening to some of Google’s top brass thank them for raising such a great group of people.

On stage, HR chief Laszlo Bock talks about the stunning amount of money that Google employees raised for victims of the earthquake in Nepal this past April and how a group actually went on site to help relief efforts.

"This isn't Google making them do this,” he says. "These are your kids, saying 'This stuff is important.'"

Bock, Google maps head Jen Fitzpatrick, and operations VP Kristen Gil all drove home a similar narrative about how Google’s vast technological innovations are only possible thanks to the caliber of its employees — "your sons and daughters!" So it’s no surprise that the session wrapped up with some damp eyes.

The heartfelt speeches were just Part One of a full day's worth of activities, including workshops, classes, and free food galore. The day culminated in a special "TGIF" question-and-answer session with cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, where parents were encouraged to ask the founders whatever questions they wanted.

Google employees
Google employees

(Business Insider / Jillian D'Onfro)
Proud parents and Googler.

It was the company's third official Take Your Parents to Work Day at its headquarters, and relatives had flocked to Silicon Valley from all over the country, and the world, to celebrate. In total, about 3,000 Googlers and 4,700 of their parents took part, with families making the trek from as far away as Qatar, New Zealand, and Serbia.

"We do it to thank parents, because for many of us, they’re part of what got us to a place like Google," Annie Robinson, a manager on the HR team that set up the event, told Business Insider. "The other big thing is that we want to peel back the curtain. Because behind the free food, we want to show them what their sons and daughters actually do here."

Parents just don't understand

Although parents can proudly spout info about Google's "moonshot" projects and legendary perks, many admit that they don't fully understand their progeny's place in it all. They're not alone: A LinkedIn survey from a couple years ago showed that more than 2/3 of parents are not completely familiar with what their kids actually do.