Freewheeling Uber faces major change. Its board is cracking down, its founder and CEO is stepping away indefinitely, and the company itself is coming to grips with measures intended to reform its toxic culture and aggressive business practices.

And it all started when Susan Fowler, a former Uber engineer, posted a personal essay in February that detailed the company’s toleration of sexual harassment and discrimination. Had she not come forward in such a public manner, it’s possible none of this would have happened.

[VIDEO: WHO’S IN CHARGE? Cnet reports on Uber’s changes at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iaarq33-cB8 ]

“What she did took real courage,” said Elizabeth Ames, a senior vice president at the Anita Borg Institute, a nonprofit founded to advance women in the technology business. “There are many women in companies and technical worlds (who) step up and talk about this problem. And often they are the ones that get tagged as being the problem.”

CH-CH-CH-CHANGES

Following Fowler’s post, Uber hired former Attorney General Eric Holder to investigate her charges . His law firm’s subsequent recommendations , released Tuesday, aim to fix Uber’s dysfunctional management, which allowed the male-dominated ride-hailing company to grow huge without even the most basic procedures to prevent sexual harassment, bullying and other bad behavior.

Also on Tuesday, Uber founder and CEO Travis Kalanick accepted responsibility for the company’s state and told employees that he’d be taking an indefinite leave of absence. The company declined to say if Kalanick’s decision was related to the report.

But Kalanick wasn’t the only Uber official sucked into the vortex unleashed by Fowler’s essay. On Monday, the company announced that Emil Michael, vice president for business and a close Kalanick ally, was also leaving. Then Uber board member and hedge fund partner David Bonderman resigned Tuesday night after making what he called an inappropriate remark about women at a company meeting.

The 13-page document from Holder’s firm Covington & Burling LLP did not outline the investigation’s findings about Uber. But its recommendations implicitly expose a startup-turned-goliath that permitted misconduct, had few policies to protect employees and ran with little board supervision.

The recommendations, adopted unanimously by Uber’s board, show clearly that the company’s next incarnation — dubbed Uber 2.0 by Kalanick — will have to be radically different from version 1.0, which flouted regulations, actively misled public investigators , and disrupted the taxi business to become the world’s largest ride-hailing company.

In her essay, Fowler wrote that she was propositioned by her manager on her first day with an engineering team. She reported him to human resources, but was told he would get a lecture and no further punishment because he was a “high performer,” she wrote.

Fowler did not respond to emailed requests for comment. But on Twitter , she called Tuesday’s moves “all optics” and wrote that she has gotten nothing but “aggressive hostility” from the company.


TIMELINE: Uber’s meltdown in 2017

Here’s a timeline of Uber’s troubles so far this year.​

  • Jan. 28: After President Donald Trump releases his first executive order on immigration, New York taxi drivers protest by refusing to pick up passengers at Kennedy Airport for an hour. Some protesters say Uber tries to capitalize on the protest by picking up passengers anyway, prompting a Twitter protest urging people to delete Uber’s app from their smartphones.
  • Feb. 2: Uber CEO Travis Kalanick quits President Trump’s council of business leaders amid mounting pressure from employees and customers over the immigration order.
  • Feb. 19: A former Uber engineer, Susan Fowler, discloses sexual harassment and sexism claims in a blog post about her year at Uber. Fowler says her boss propositioned her and higher-ups ignored her complaints. Kalanick calls Fowler’s accusations “abhorrent” and hires former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to investigate.
  • Feb. 23: Waymo, a self-driving car company spun off from Google, sues Uber. Waymo alleges that Anthony Levandowski — a former top manager for Google’s self-driving car project — stole pivotal technology from Google before leaving to run Uber’s self-driving car division.
  • Feb. 28: A video emerges of Kalanick arguing with an Uber driver. It includes yelling and profanity and ends with a combative Kalanick dismissing the agitated driver’s claims that sharp reductions in fares forced him into bankruptcy. In an email to employees, Kalanick admits he needs leadership help. “I must fundamentally change as a leader and grow up,” he says.
  • March 3: The New York Times reveals that Uber used a phony version of its app to thwart authorities in cities where it was operating illegally. Uber’s so-called Greyball software identified regulators who were posing as riders and blocked access to them. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating Uber’s use of the Greyball software.
  • March 19: Uber’s president, Jeff Jones, resigns less than a year after joining the company. He tells the tech blog Recode that his approach to leadership is at odds with what he experienced at Uber.
  • April 18: Sherif Marakby, a global vice president who leads Uber’s self-driving car program, leaves the company.
  • April 27: Levandowski announces he is stepping aside while Uber defends itself against the allegations from Waymo.
  • May 11: A federal judge in San Francisco rejects Uber’s request for arbitration and refers Waymo’s case to the U.S. Attorney’s office for a possible criminal investigation. Days later the judge bans Uber from using technology taken from Waymo, but doesn’t order Uber to halt its self-driving vehicle program, as Waymo requested. The case is set for trial in October.
  • May 26: Kalanick’s mother dies in a boating accident. His father is seriously injured.
  • May 30: Uber fires Levandowski.
  • May 31: Uber’s finance chief Gautam Gupta says he plans to leave the company in July.
  • June 6: Uber fires 20 people after a law firm, Perkins Coie, investigates complaints of harassment, bullying and retaliation. That investigation, which was separate from Holder’s, checked into 215 complaints; 57 are still under investigation.
  • June 11: Uber’s board meets with Holder and adopts a series of recommendations based on his report.
  • June 12: Emil Michael, Uber’s senior vice president for business and a close ally of Kalanick, leaves the company.
  • June 13: Kalanick tells Uber employees that he’s taking a leave for an unspecified period, but will be available for “the most strategic decisions.” Uber’s board releases Holder’s recommendations, which include removing some of Kalanick’s responsibilities and replacing Uber’s chairman and founder, Garrett Camp, with an independent chairman. Holder also recommends many cultural and policy changes, from establishing an effective complaint process to recruiting more diverse applicants to prohibiting alcohol and drug use during core work hours.

Source: The AP


THE RECOMMENDATIONS

After interviewing 200 witnesses, Holder had to make such basic recommendations as setting clear policies to protect workers from harassment, and that the human resources department get a better handle on keeping records and tracking employee complaints.

The recommendations “definitely paint a picture of a company that was out of control and pretty chaotic,” said Ames, the Borg Institute executive.

Holder also suggested that Uber change its written cultural values to promote positive behavior, inclusion and collaboration. That means doing away with values that justified poor behavior, such as “Let Builders Build,” ”Always Be Hustlin’,” ”Meritocracy and Toe-Stepping” and “Principled Confrontation.”

Holder also called for trimming Kalanick’s job duties, shifting day-to-day functions to a yet-to-be-hired chief operating officer. During Kalanick’s leave, his leadership team will run the troubled company.

Kalanick wrote that he needs time off to grieve for his mother, who died in a May boating accident. He also said he’s responsible for the company’s situation and needs to become a better leader.

THEORY AND PRACTICE

Uber’s board said it would review Kalanick’s responsibilities and reassign some to others.

Ames said the recommendations were strong but indicated Uber had few policies, and the ones it had were not followed.

The board unanimously approved the recommendations on Sunday, including a suggestion that a senior executive be tasked with making sure they are implemented. Apparently because of distrust of some leaders, Holder recommended that care be taken to make sure the executive “is viewed positively by the employees.”

The company released only Holder’s recommendations, not his full report, citing the need to protect employees who complained.

Liane Hornsey, Uber’s chief human resources officer who started in January, said implementing the recommendations “will improve our culture, promote fairness and accountability, and establish processes and systems to ensure the mistakes of the past will not be repeated.”

Holder also recommended adding independent directors and replacing the board chairman, co-founder Garrett Camp, with an independent person. The board currently has eight voting members, three from within the company.

Uber was also advised to make sure its workforce is more diverse. The company’s diversity figures are similar to the rest of Silicon Valley, with low numbers for women and underrepresented minorities. In the U.S., less than a third of the company’s workers are female.

In addition, the report says that diversity and inclusiveness should be a key value for Uber that’s included in management training.

After Fowler posted her essay, Uber Technologies Inc. made changes in human resources and opened a 24-hour hotline for employees. Last week, the company fired 20 people, including some managers, at the recommendation of Perkins Coie, which separately investigated 215 employee complaints.

FLYING HIGH?

Under Kalanick, Uber has disrupted the taxi industry in hundreds of cities and turned the San Francisco-based company into the world’s most valuable startup. As of late last year, Uber’s private-market valuation had climbed to nearly $70 billion.

Besides the sexual harassment complaints, in recent months Uber has been threatened by boycotts, sued and subject to a federal investigation over its use of a fake version of its app to thwart authorities looking into whether it is breaking local laws.

A company can be aggressive yet have strong values, said Joseph Holt, a business ethics professor at the University of Notre Dame. He cited Starbucks as an example.

“Having a good reputation for ethics is a competitive advantage,” Holt said.

A culture change at Uber may be more difficult than Holder envisions.

At an employee meeting Tuesday morning, Bonderman remarked that if a woman was added to the board that there likely would be more talking, according to a recording obtained by Yahoo.

By evening, Bonderman resigned and put out a statement saying the comment was careless and inappropriate. “I do not want my comments to create distraction as Uber works to build a culture of which we can be proud,” the statement said.