In the wake of sexual harassment and USAfundamental employee mismanagement allegations detailed by a female engineer, thousands of people are deleting Uber from their smartphones in protest. Again.
SEE ALSO: Uber's ratings are in the toiletIt's a nice gesture, but will probably have very little impact on Uber's bottom line. This is a global company after all, and I think it's safe to assume that most of those deleting Uber are in the U.S. The #DeleteUber movement gives you that temporary rush of "There. Now I've really done something!" until you realize that the last time we all did #DeleteUber over Uber CEO Travis Kalanick's involvement with President Donald Trump, just 200,000 people (out of an estimated 40 million monthly uniques) dropped the service.
Plus, the protest probably hurts individual drivers just trying to make a living far more than it does Kalanick. It’s obvious, at least to me, what should happen here.
I know this is heresy in our founder-obsessed tech society, but the bro culture that fostered an environment where a manager can proposition a female employee without consequence must trace directly back to the top.
Kalanick always struck me as someone who didn't give a damn. He's smart, brash and disruptive. He once famously called taxi drivers "assholes" and telegraphed to current Uber drivers that, thanks to self-driving cars, they would soon no longer be necessary. We know he sat idly while one of his lieutenants suggested people dig up dirt on a female journalist, and, yes, he reportedly joked that he calls women on demand "Boob-er."
If Kalanick was just the douchey face of an otherwise smart and well-run company that would be one thing. But if you get nothing else from Susan Fowler Rigetti's (who goes by Susan J. Fowler on her personal website) damning blog post detailing Uber's sexism problem, it should be the picture of an organization that values certain high-performers over everything else, including basic decency.
It’s hard to see this pervasive attitude as anyone but Kalanick’s fault. If you cut off the head, the body can function … at least temporarily.
I do believe in what Uber does. I just take issue with some of how it does it. A new leader, especially if it’s one who represents diversity … oh hell, I'll just say it, a woman should run that company. There are many qualified C-level women who could do the job. Take Ursula Burns, the 58-year-old former Xerox CEO who may be stepping down from the recently split company. Or what about current YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki? Someone should compile a complete list and send it to Uber's board.
One person I don't want in the driver's seat is Arianna Huffington, who is actually the board member personally involved in investigating Fowler Rigetti's accusations. On paper, she's a perfect fit: digitally engaged, forward-leaning, understands the Uber consumer and she's already on Uber’s board. And that's the problem. Huffington joined the board in April 2016. Everyone on that board is as culpable as Kalanick in this mess.
The fact that she's suddenly out front, promising to hold Uber's "feet to the fire" only makes it worse. Where was she for the last 12 months? An argument can be made that the board didn't know about the everyday sexism, but if that's the case, that's even more of a sign Uber needs a shakeup. At the very least Huffington needs to step forward and say that finding a new CEO is the board’s number one priority.
I know the manager who allegedly propositioned Fowler Rigetti is long gone (as is she from Uber), but considering the shenanigans she described (mid-level managers withholding intel so they could use it to leapfrog their own managers), a serious reorg is in order.
Uber could start by taking a hard look at anyone Kalanick hired directly since they probably revere the CEO and his perspectives on technology, women and business.
An HR department focused almost entirely on protecting managers and the bottom line above employees as a whole is no HR department at all.
What Fowler Rigetti describes is unconscionable. She (and other co-workers) had multiple interactions with the department, trying to get them to do anything about their series of management and sexual harassment complaints. But HR became the land of “no.” Incompetency is one thing. Blatant disregard for people’s emotional well-being is another.
What Uber desperately needs right now is transparency. I have no idea what kinds of policies were in place when Fowler Rigetti was employed there, but they were obviously ignored by her manager and the HR department.
A new document, possibly written by someone outside Uber, will partially help change the culture and posting it publicly will encourage enforcement and compliance.
I doubt any of these things will happen at Uber. People can’t imagine Uber without its visionary leader, Kalanick and, at best, we’ll see some surgical expulsions of managers and human resources employees. There will be no reorg or department reboots. Kalanick will continue to well-up and appear contrite, Uber will make small changes and the problem will probably fester and regrow because no one was willing to tear it out by its roots.
If Uber truly wants to save itself, though, it's board should seriously consider my suggestions.
Previous:Holy Machiavels
'Teletubbies' debunks viral tweet about Sun Baby having a babyLost French submarine finally found after 50 years missingThe best cheeseYou can take the subway, but you can't hide from Donald Trump's face'Home Alone,' 'Iron Man' movie posters get delicious cheese makeoversRep. Tulsi Gabbard, a Democratic presidential candidate, sues Google for ‘election interference’Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks, Solange and more attend the Obamas' farewell partyWoman discovers sneaky seal hiding in her back garden12 times Renata Klein's rage was the best part of 'Big Little Lies'Serena Williams used Reddit to show off her engagement ring with her beauMeet the dude who knits sweaters of places, then visits themVladimir Putin wanted a President TrumpHow boring your state is, based on its favorite ice cream flavorAmazon tweets article warning robots will replace workers if John Oliver isn't nicerMartin Shkreli's Twitter account suspended after he posts creepy photo collageEvan Rachel Wood wants girls to know they don't have to wear dresses'Stranger Things' star Dacre Montgomery opens up about childhood struggles on InstagramYou can take the subway, but you can't hide from Donald Trump's faceMaisie Williams and Sophie Turner just took friendship goals to a whole new levelSorry, your 'anonymized' data probably isn't anonymous Go ahead, make fun of Mark Zuckerberg's face all you want Banal Sentimentality; Tackling Tolstoy by Lorin Stein Paul Maliszewski on ‘Prayer and Parable’ by Amie Barrodale Tesla's fastest Anthony Giardina on ‘Norumbega Park’ by Andrew Martin 'Alpha males' and the Manosphere: Stop listening to these scammers At the Gettin' Place by Aaron Gilbreath Wendy's announces AI automation of drive Sodad by Janine de Novais Design for Living by Elaine Blair Ivanka Trump sparks bean memes after she posed with can of Goya beans 'Guardian of the Galaxy Vol. 3's mid 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for May 6 TikTok users create fake 'safety calls' to help protect each other IRL You should watch the excellent John Lewis documentary, 'Good Trouble' Getting in the Habit by Perrin Drumm Mistaken Identity by Jenny Hendrix Staff Picks: ‘At Last,’ Ambivalence by The Paris Review Eurovision 2023: All 37 songs hitting the finals James Shea’s “Haiku” by Sarah Braunstein