I've worked with two amazing VPs of eng, one of which unified our ops and dev teams in purpose and goals, and the other was able to re-focus us from firefighting to sustainable growth in engineering projects. They were worth, literally, their weight in gold to the success of the company. These happened at a hundred person eng dept and a 300 person eng org if I recall.
I have also worked with a couple who I am not sure what they did. And a couple that I think were actively harmful by not taking actions, letting problems steep, and pursuing pie in the sky solutions ("we could expand from our core product to offer our $internl_tool_that_barely_works, let's overly fund that while customers churn on quality issues")
And fwiw, I have yet to have a positive experience from an ex-googler and it is more of a toss up with former amazon folks. They are simply too used to white glove systems that have had, literally, billions spent developing these systems to the custom problems of these mega orgs.
I'm at a startup that is at an earlier stage than your two examples. Our CEO hired a VP Eng on a tight schedule and didn't give the engineering team an opportunity to interview him. I was definitely suspicious, especially given past experiences with the "professional manager" types we're all discussing here. The day I knew it was going to be fine was the day I went into the shop early, discovered that the lights were already on, and found him in the back laying out a bunch of holes to drill in an aluminum plate.
"Uhhhh what's up man?"
"The mounting plate from the contractors didn't fit right so I'm making a new one. I know you guys have electronics to mount and test today and don't want you to be blocked"
I have also worked with a couple who I am not sure what they did. And a couple that I think were actively harmful by not taking actions, letting problems steep, and pursuing pie in the sky solutions ("we could expand from our core product to offer our $internl_tool_that_barely_works, let's overly fund that while customers churn on quality issues")
And fwiw, I have yet to have a positive experience from an ex-googler and it is more of a toss up with former amazon folks. They are simply too used to white glove systems that have had, literally, billions spent developing these systems to the custom problems of these mega orgs.