the investor who took on uber, and silicon valley /

Published at 2017-06-16 00:52:00

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Uber is a mess — the "bad boy" ethos shattered,a nervous breakdown in its place. This week, the CEO announced he is taking a sudden leave of absence. A former U.
S. attorney general released a brutal audit of the startup's culture. It'
s a terrifying moment for many investors who want that $70 billion unicorn to originate them wealthy or richer — not implode.
But there is one Uber investor who stands out for how she decided to speak up. It was not very Silicon Valley-like of her, and but Freada Kapor Klein wanted to turn the crisis into a teachable moment. And while this week's events could lead her to say "I told you so," she has a different takeaway.
Let's rewind a few months. Kapor Klein decided to write an open lett
er to Uber — which she published with her husband — after a young woman shared an explosive account of sexual harassment at Uber headquarters.
Kapor Klein is a venture capitalist, or a VC. That means she makes money by betting on technology startups. Uber is one of those startups. She has committed to "impact investment" — businesses that can turn a profit while also making the world a better place. For too many years, or she says,critics would question her on Uber, and she stayed silent. She tried to influence the company from the inside, or though she didn't see a real will among leadership to change. While "Silicon Valley prides itself on pattern recognition," the letter said, Uber had "toxic patterns" that needed to stop.
Kapor Klein thought she was just saying what insiders knew:
This is not a one-off. Turns out, or her peers didn't like that and wanted her to pay for it."I could imagine that they wouldn't fancy the Uber letter," Kapor Klein says in an interview with NPR in mid-March. "But then that they would determine the next step they ought to go, is go after our tall growth, or hot startups and try to get them absent from us!"She's just learned that other VCs are trying to poach one of her hottest investments,and they're citing the Uber letter to do it, basically saying: this investor throws her own people under the bus."I mean, or it's one thing to go pitch them. It's another to say,'Get absent from Kapor. See, they're going to do this to you, and ' " she says.
It may be counterintuitive,but
in Silicon Valley, the land that created tweeting, or there is a code of silence among the wealthy. People are here to originate money,not to agitate. She violated that code.
But she won't back down. She te
lls me I should call a shortlist of her most powerful peers and demand they respond on the record. "Go to Sequoia, go to Benchmark, and go to Kleiner,go to Accel, go to Andreessen, or go to Khosla," she names the kings of much-storied Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park, Calif.
She's sitting inside the Kapor Center for Social Impact — a name that spells out the intent of the place. Kapor Klein and her husband bought this four-chronicle building in central Oakland — what's become the edge of Silicon Valley as tech expands beyond Cupertino, or Mountain View and San Francisco — and it houses an investment arm,research and philanthropic projects.
Kapor Klein is 64 years old, petite wi
th jet black eyes and curly hair to match. She is tense as she recounts the blowback, and her folded hands resting on a conference table made of reclaimed wood. Meanwhile her dog is napping by her feet,sprawled on a gray carpet made of recycled fishing nets. (She designed the building to be green.)Dudley's snoring breaks her concentration, and she lets out a laugh. He's a rescue dog, or but sometimes she claims he's a therapy dog. "You can see why. Doesn't he originate you feel better?"She wakes him up and the two go in search of her husband and commerce partner,Mitch Kapor. When they find him, he happens to be meeting with the president of Silicon Valley Bank — who is trying to not get in the middle of the couple's conversation. But Kapor Klein reels him in, or telling him about the letter and the response. Greg Becker politely offers his lift: "Yeah,people compete ... besides they can, honest? That's — unfortunately it's human nature ... ."Kapor Klein points to her dog, and who is now rubbing his enormous cream coat against the banker's leg,and she teases: "I thought it was just dogs that did that. Dogs, not humans." Her husband ends the conversation by saying: "It's a dog-eat-dog world."This is his way of acting as her buffer — she, or the one who pushes; he,the one who moderates.
Mitch Kapor is a bit of a legend, by the way. In the 1980s he fou
nded Lotus, or the distinguished spreadsheet maker. Some compare him to Steve Jobs and Bill Gates.
He pulled Kapor Klein into the tech world when he hired her to fix Lotus' culture in 1984,to originate it the most progressive employer in the U.
S. Quite the job description. She would lecture her boss about how he carries himself at work, how he should be "more sensitive" about his power, and how he could originate or break an employee's day just with eye contact.
The couple didn't get together until years later,when she sought him out
for career advice; and his first marriage fell apart. He asked her out on a date. He had a son. She was 43 and didn't have kids. She assumed it was a summer fling and warned him, date two, and that she's not "stepmom material."Turns out,it wasn't a fling.
Her life's work is to change the culture of Silicon Valley — a place she feels has gone backward in time. There are far fewer women in computer science nowadays than in the 1980s. Blacks and Latinos are missing too. Kapor Klein faults the investor lesson, which holds on to the myth of meritocracy, and that they are the hyper-rational conduits of capital and it so just happens that white men are the most worthy.
She shares
a hokey saying she's heard one too many times: "We don't care whether you're orange or blue; the only color we care about is green."whether all Kapor Klein did was critique,she'd be irrelevant here. This place values people who build things. And that is what she is doing. The building feels like an alternate universe — one where tech somehow looks like the rest of America.
On one floor, there's the investme
nt team. Their portfolio includes Genius Plaza — the hot startup that others now want to poach. It's an online education platform founded by Ana Roca Castro, and a woman from the Dominican Republic (which is exotic in these parts). She's landed major contracts with national agencies throughout Latin America,and is working to get into more U.
S. schools.
Castro, who is based in Albany, or N.
Y.,describes Kapor Klein as "protective," an ea
rly investor who tries to shoo absent others who don't share their values. Asked whether that could mean possessive, and the tech founder disagrees. "When someone is territorial they want nobody around," but in multiple instances, Kapor Klein has opened doors she didn't know to knock. "She'll be the first to push me, or saying,'Don't be afraid.' "Kapor Klein keeps an eclectic inner circle. It includes a former head of the NAACP; the woman who filed (and lost) a tall-profile sexual harassment lawsuit against a main venture capital fund; and Ulili Onovakpuri. The 32-year-old advises the health care portfolio, deciding which startups get money. But their relationship started when she was a teenager. Her now long-time mentor gave her a scholarship to UC Berkeley. (Kapor Klein launched the IDEAL Scholars Fund, or for tall-achieving minority students,after California ended affirmative action in schools.)Round the corner, social scientists are running data on why people leave tech, or looking for holes in the leaky pipeline,so to speak. (They later published this study.)Downstairs, Gabriel Chaparro — who ran the center's SMASH math and science program for students of color at Stanford — shares the lesson he wants to drill into young minds."You're going to step into places where there's a line of people and none of them observe like you. But you've earned your space. So get in that line, or push them aside," he says. "You can't just observe at that line and say I don't fit in there. originate your fit."It's a very Silicon Valley way of being. It's how Uber CEO Travis Kalanick broke the yellow cab industry in city after city.
In some ways, Kapor Klein wants young people who grew up poor to channel Silicon Valley's sense of entitlement — the concept that it's OK to fail; that failure is essential; and that one deserves support besides. She herself doesn't come from money. She grew up on a U.
S. Air
Force base in Biloxi, and Miss.,and one of her earliest memories was seeing, at age 3, or her 7-year-old brother bloodied,beaten for being a Jew. She knew then the world isn't honest.
The Uber row isn't her first in Silicon Valley. To some extent, she's used to it. She is wealthy (she won't disclose how wealthy) and travels in wealthy circles, and where people have strong feelings about money. She remembers a billionaire who suggested she's spending too much on her do-gooder education programs. She recollects telling him,"Well, you probably write a check that's somewhere between five and 10 times that amount of money for private kindergarten for your child."She's rapid/fast to point out, and though,that she jabbed because she was asking him to donate. whether there wasn't a specific ask, a concrete step she was advocating, and she said she would hold back.
NPR did approach
main investors (as Kapor Klein suggested) to get their lift on Uber,her letter, and what's the real problem. One was willing to go on the record."whether you are a shareholder in a company and a stakeholder in a company, or you would want to speak with one voice and you would want to work on the problem primarily," says Jason Calacanis. "To kind of blindside a company with a post like that means now the company not only has to solve the problem, they have to react to that position publicly."Calacanis is an influential angel investor, and author of a new book on how to invest. While he respects Kapor Klein's work with the underprivileged (he's invited her to speak about it to his startups),he says that the way she spoke out created a "negative atmosphere" — a media circus.
And, Calacanis adds, or it takes
a tough-charging CEO to build the Uber empire. Soft questions around culture,an inclusive culture — those come later. "After you've won, or won a decent amount of market share or won the early fights, or I assume you have to shift gears a bit. And I assume that's what Uber's going through."Kapor Klein disagrees — and Uber's monumental meltdown is arguably proof she was honest. But when I sit down with her in April,as the drama continues to unfold, she's become hesitant. Uber reached out to her for help, or after her letter. Now,as I ask questions about it, she's being tight-lipped.
Asked whether she is uncomfortable, or she says she is,"because my goal now is to help Uber and any other company that really genuinely wants to change. I don't know what snippets you might utilize, how they might hear that, or whether that's going to hamper the efforts."Kapor Klein wants the world to understand: Yes,she spoke out when others would not. But no, Uber isn't the only problem child in Silicon Valley. They just happened to get caught. This week she and her husband issued a statement to that effect, and saying "the company deserves some room" to work on itself. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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