Filip Syta: "So yeah, there's a lot of sex within the company." Filip Syta Filip Syta worked as an ad sales executive at Google for two years until 2014, when he became disillusioned with his work. So Syta dropped out and wrote a novel, "The Show," about a fictional search advertising giant. The story describes a San Francisco company called Show that employs a lot of 20-somethings who make a lot of money, have a lot of parties, drink a lot of booze, sleep with one another indiscriminately, and take a lot of cocaine.

"The Show" was published in January, and Business Insider got hold of an early edition. It tells the story of Victor, who gets an ad sales job at Show but over time becomes depressed with the emptiness of his life, despite the money. Victor gets swept up into a whirl of partying and casual sex while failing to get the attention of another employee, Maggie, whom he has actual feelings for.

The most interesting parts of the book are the sections that deal with the company's in-house drug dealers, "the drug lords," and the sections that describe the way Show's ad sales execs simply make up, or lie about, numbers and statistics for their managers and clients.

The word "Google" is not mentioned in the book. So it's definitely not about Google, just so everyone is clear!

A Google representative declined to comment.

Nonetheless, there are some remarkable similarities between the fictional Show and the actual Google (or Alphabet, as it is now known). Both companies are search ad companies. Show has $93 billion in annual revenue (more than Google, but on Google's scale). And the internal rule at both companies is that leakers get fired.

So we were curious: How much of this is true, or inspired by real events?

"Ninety percent," Syta told us.

Those colours look familiar. Filip Syta Here's how the drug lords are introduced in the book:

The two dealers ran a personal enterprise within SHOW. They provided the entire company with drugs — you wanted it, they had it. They were both skinny and looked quite normal, nobody you would pay any special attention to on the street. They worked in sales, so they had the skills to sell their product. On the other hand, the demand was high, so they didn't really need to do much. It was like selling ice cream to kids on a hot summer day.

They were obviously smart guys and had figured out that they didn't need to do it all by themselves, since they could outsource and build a sales team that would do their shit for them. They now had a sales team of about five people who distributed their stuff around the office when they didn't do it themselves, like they did at the party. Different departments, different floors, different groups of people. And the two guys were just collecting cash.

The drug lords show up occasionally throughout the book, usually at Show corporate parties, where colleagues of Victor take a lot of cocaine. All of this was inspired by Syta's experience in the tech industry, he says.

"There are guys who basically distributed if you want it, I mean weed or whatever," he said. "They were the go-to guys if someone wanted something. And they used the office as their primary market. So it was easy for them. They didn't have a booth where they were 'officially.' But they spent a lot of time there."

In the book, everyone eventually gets sucked in and starts taking the drugs these guys are supplying. There is a particularly vivid chapter about the company flying hundreds of employees to a conference in Las Vegas, where the men end up partying with strippers and hookers. (The fictional Show is based in San Francisco even though Google is actually based in nearby Mountain View, and Syta himself actually worked out of the 5,000-person Dublin office).

Was the drug scene as big in real life, or is that exaggerated in the book?

Filip Syta "There is a lot of different drugs, not only cocaine, but marijuana, or some stuff. Cocaine was popular," Syta says. "Definitely, once again, not the majority of people. But enough people that it's common, you could say. It was well known, not a shock, that people took cocaine or something when they partied.

"You get bored after a while, you get everything there, basically. They do everything that your mother doesn't do for you anymore. There's a dry-cleaning service, swimming pool, dentist, doctor, food, massage — you don't have to think about anything. You just go to work and it’s all taken care of.

"And also I think a lot of talent is being wasted there because we hired smart people. We will hire smart people, but they hire overqualified people because they have such a strong brand. Many people are bored at their job ... It's kind of chill and might get boring. These other people seek out other adventures when they're together — they don't have to care about anything. They know Google has their back. It's like a kindergarten for grown-ups. And obviously there was a higher and more adventurous type who obviously take more risks. Everyone is very relaxed, and they don't take the safe way."

There is also a lot of sex in "The Show." Empty, meaningless, depressing, drunk sex. One character, a driven female manager named Nicky, gets so drunk and stoned on a business trip to San Diego that she fails to notice two colleagues having sex on a hotel sofa right next to her. A couple of other stories in the book are too graphic to retell on Business Insider.

"That's exaggerated," Syta says. But there was a lot of sex at work, he adds. "It is like a university, except that you get paid, right? A lot of people are young professionals, mid-20s to mid-30s, 25 to 35. It's a young company. The only really senior people are the VPs or the managers. Otherwise, it's a young crowd. And then there's a lot of parties. So yeah, there's a lot of sex within the company, between people, a lot of people have had the same sex partners as others. A bit like a uni campus."

Filip Syta Another dramatic aspect in "The Show" is the lying and cheating that goes on regarding numbers and metrics at Show. In one scene, Vic's team has to pitch a movie studio ad account. But the team fails to prepare before the meeting and instead makes up numbers that sound good:

Because we worked at SHOW, we knew the client wouldn't question them, either. We were confident our fairy tale would work. It was an easy sell. We had observed our managers making up numbers for their bosses every day. The higher-ups were so overwhelmed with data that nobody ever questioned it. We figured we could do the same thing.

Syta told Business Insider the company was "extremely data driven."

"They measure everything, and you want to look good to your manager and your manager wants to look good to their manager and up the chain it goes, so you want to report great numbers," Syta said. "Rarely someone checks, so they will make up cases for reporting, make it sound better than it really is. Data can be, depending on how you present it, data could be X or Y or Z, so it suits you well. So there could be a manager who asks before: 'OK, it's not good enough,' and they say, 'Ah well just make something up to improve it.' Or they will urge their teams to cheat because they want to live good, that they manage a team who's performing well to their managers. And that manager will want to look good to the next level. So and then it becomes a big chain of lies. Internally and externally."

Does nobody check?

"No, no because no one cares."

But surely there are numbers and metrics that can be easily verified?

"No, no, not always," Syta said. "Because the upper manager will not go down to the account manager-level and check. Of course they will see real cash flow coming in. But in specific cases of a specific client, they won't check. As long as it looks good everyone is happy because everyone cares only about their own task to look good to their next upper manager."

One character in the book who everyone who has ever worked at a large company will recognise: Alex, a Show veteran who has figured out how to keep his job while doing the least amount of work possible. He leaves his jacket and laptop on a different floor from his desk. He arrives late in the morning, carrying them from the other floor, so that it looks as if he was in an early meeting. Alex is also an alcoholic who wets himself outside a nightclub one night.

So why wasn't the real "Alex" fired?

"He was too smart — he outsmarted the system and management, I think," Syta says. "He was just smart, knowing what to say, to who, and how to be present when he needs to. And that's it. He was happy that he will never have a job where he does this little, and gets this much money for it."

One of the reasons Syta bailed out of Google had to do with the cynicism of his colleagues over the Christmas gifts given by the company to employees. For two years in a row, Syta says, staffers received Nexus tablets. "It was a tablet two years in a row, and then everyone complained ... people were unhappy because it was a tablet the year before as well," he said. So the company offered to change the gift to a Nexus phone, if staff chose, "which they got after some complaining."

Syta thought this was ridiculous, that he was living a life so coddled that someone would complain about receiving a free computer. "That’s what I mean — you lose appreciation. "

Syta is now a growth manager at Ztory, a books and magazines app, in Stockholm.