分享

Reflecting On One Very, Very Strange Year At Uber

 凡乐仙人居 2017-06-24
February 19, 2017

As most of you know, I left Uber in December and joined Stripe in January. I've gotten a lot of questions over the past couple of months about why I left and what my time at Uber was like. It's a strange, fascinating, and slightly horrifying story that deserves to be told while it is still fresh in my mind, so here we go. 

I joined Uber as a site reliability engineer (SRE) back in November 2015, and it was a great time to join as an engineer. They were still wrangling microservices out of their monolithic API, and things were just chaotic enough that there was exciting reliability work to be done. The SRE team was still pretty new when I joined, and I had the rare opportunity to choose whichever team was working on something that I wanted to be part of. 

After the first couple of weeks of training, I chose to join the team that worked on my area of expertise, and this is where things started getting weird. On my first official day rotating on the team, my new manager sent me a string of messages over company chat. He was in an open relationship, he said, and his girlfriend was having an easy time finding new partners but he wasn't. He was trying to stay out of trouble at work, he said, but he couldn't help getting in trouble, because he was looking for women to have sex with. It was clear that he was trying to get me to have sex with him, and it was so clearly out of line that I immediately took screenshots of these chat messages and reported him to HR.

Uber was a pretty good-sized company at that time, and I had pretty standard expectations of how they would handle situations like this. I expected that I would report him to HR, they would handle the situation appropriately, and then life would go on - unfortunately, things played out quite a bit differently. When I reported the situation, I was told by both HR and upper management that even though this was clearly sexual harassment and he was propositioning me, it was this man's first offense, and that they wouldn't feel comfortable giving him anything other than a warning and a stern talking-to. Upper management told me that he "was a high performer" (i.e. had stellar performance reviews from his superiors) and they wouldn't feel comfortable punishing him for what was probably just an innocent mistake on his part.

I was then told that I had to make a choice: (i) I could either go and find another team and then never have to interact with this man again, or (ii) I could stay on the team, but I would have to understand that he would most likely give me a poor performance review when review time came around, and there was nothing they could do about that. I remarked that this didn't seem like much of a choice, and that I wanted to stay on the team because I had significant expertise in the exact project that the team was struggling to complete (it was genuinely in the company's best interest to have me on that team), but they told me the same thing again and again. One HR rep even explicitly told me that it wouldn't be retaliation if I received a negative review later because I had been "given an option". I tried to escalate the situation but got nowhere with either HR or with my own management chain (who continued to insist that they had given him a stern-talking to and didn't want to ruin his career over his "first offense"). 

So I left that team, and took quite a few weeks learning about other teams before landing anywhere (I desperately wanted to not have to interact with HR ever again). I ended up joining a brand-new SRE team that gave me a lot of autonomy, and I found ways to be happy and do amazing work. In fact, the work I did on this team turned into the production-readiness process which I wrote about in my bestselling (!!!) book Production-Ready Microservices. 

Over the next few months, I began to meet more women engineers in the company. As I got to know them, and heard their stories, I was surprised that some of them had stories similar to my own. Some of the women even had stories about reporting the exact same manager I had reported, and had reported inappropriate interactions with him long before I had even joined the company. It became obvious that both HR and management had been lying about this being "his first offense", and it certainly wasn't his last. Within a few months, he was reported once again for inappropriate behavior, and those who reported him were told it was still his "first offense". The situation was escalated as far up the chain as it could be escalated, and still nothing was done.

Myself and a few of the women who had reported him in the past decided to all schedule meetings with HR to insist that something be done. In my meeting, the rep I spoke with told me that he had never been reported before, he had only ever committed one offense (in his chats with me), and that none of the other women who they met with had anything bad to say about him, so no further action could or would be taken. It was such a blatant lie that there was really nothing I could do. There was nothing any of us could do. We all gave up on Uber HR and our managers after that. Eventually he "left" the company. I don't know what he did that finally convinced them to fire him. 

In the background, there was a game-of-thrones political war raging within the ranks of upper management in the infrastructure engineering organization. It seemed like every manager was fighting their peers and attempting to undermine their direct supervisor so that they could have their direct supervisor's job. No attempts were made by these managers to hide what they were doing: they boasted about it in meetings, told their direct reports about it, and the like. I remember countless meetings with my managers and skip-levels where I would sit there, not saying anything, and the manager would be boasting about finding favor with their skip-level and that I should expect them to have their manager's job within a quarter or two. I also remember a very disturbing team meeting in which one of the directors boasted to our team that he had withheld business-critical information from one of the executives so that he could curry favor with one of the other executives (and, he told us with a smile on his face, it worked!).

The ramifications of these political games were significant: projects were abandoned left and right, OKRs were changed multiple times each quarter, nobody knew what our organizational priorities would be one day to the next, and very little ever got done. We all lived under fear that our teams would be dissolved, there would be another re-org, and we'd have to start on yet another new project with an impossible deadline. It was an organization in complete, unrelenting chaos. 

I was lucky enough during all of this to work with some of the most amazing engineers in the Bay Area. We kept our heads down and did good (sometimes great) work despite the chaos. We loved our work, we loved the engineering challenges, we loved making this crazy Uber machine work, and together we found ways to make it through the re-orgs and the changing OKRs and the abandoned projects and the impossible deadlines. We kept each other sane, kept the gigantic Uber ecosystem running, and told ourselves that it would eventually get better.

Things didn't get better, and engineers began transferring to the less chaotic engineering organizations. Once I had finished up my projects and saw that things weren't going to change, I also requested a transfer. I met all of the qualifications for transferring - I had managers who wanted me on their teams, and I had a perfect performance score - so I didn't see how anything could go wrong. And then my transfer was blocked. 

According to my manager, his manager, and the director, my transfer was being blocked because I had undocumented performance problems. I pointed out that I had a perfect performance score, and that there had never been any complaints about my performance. I had completed all OKRs on schedule, never missed a deadline even in the insane organizational chaos, and that I had managers waiting for me to join their team. I asked what my performance problem was, and they didn't give me an answer. At first they said I wasn't being technical enough, so I pointed out that they were the ones who had given me my OKRs, and if they wanted to see different work from me then they should give me the kind of work they wanted to see - they then backed down and stopped saying that this was the problem. I kept pushing, until finally I was told that "performance problems aren't always something that has to do with work, but sometimes can be about things outside of work or your personal life." I couldn't decipher that, so I gave up and decided to stay until my next performance review. 

Performance review season came around, and I received a great review with no complaints whatsoever about my performance. I waited a couple of months, and then attempted to transfer again. When I attempted to transfer, I was told that my performance review and score had been changed after the official reviews had been calibrated, and so I was no longer eligible for transfer. When I asked management why my review had been changed after the fact (and why hadn't they let me know that they'd changed it?), they said that I didn't show any signs of an upward career trajectory. I pointed out that I was publishing a book with O'Reilly, speaking at major tech conferences, and doing all of the things that you're supposed to do to have an "upward career trajectory", but they said it didn't matter and I needed to prove myself as an engineer. I was stuck where I was. 

I asked them to change my performance review back. My manager said that the new negative review I was given had no real-world consequences, so I shouldn't worry about it. But I went home and cried that day, because even aside from impacts to my salary and bonuses, it did have real-world consequences - significant consequences that my management chain was very well aware of. I was enrolled in a Stanford CS graduate program, sponsored by Uber, and Uber only sponsored employees who had high performance scores. Under both of my official performance reviews and scores, I qualified for the program, but after this sneaky new negative score I was no longer eligible. 

It turned out that keeping me on the team made my manager look good, and I overheard him boasting to the rest of the team that even though the rest of the teams were losing their women engineers left and right, he still had some on his team. 

When I joined Uber, the organization I was part of was over 25% women. By the time I was trying to transfer to another eng organization, this number had dropped down to less than 6%. Women were transferring out of the organization, and those who couldn't transfer were quitting or preparing to quit. There were two major reasons for this: there was the organizational chaos, and there was also the sexism within the organization. When I asked our director at an org all-hands about what was being done about the dwindling numbers of women in the org compared to the rest of the company, his reply was, in a nutshell, that the women of Uber just needed to step up and be better engineers.

Things were beginning to get even more comically absurd with each passing day. Every time something ridiculous happened, every time a sexist email was sent, I'd sent a short report to HR just to keep a record going. Things came to a head with one particular email chain from the director of our engineering organization concerning leather jackets that had been ordered for all of the SREs. See, earlier in the year, the organization had promised leather jackets for everyone in organization, and had taken all of our sizes; we all tried them on and found our sizes, and placed our orders. One day, all of the women (there were, I believe, six of us left in the org) received an email saying that no leather jackets were being ordered for the women because there were not enough women in the organization to justify placing an order. I replied and said that I was sure Uber SRE could find room in their budget to buy leather jackets for the, what, six women if it could afford to buy them for over a hundred and twenty men. The director replied back, saying that if we women really wanted equality, then we should realize we were getting equality by not getting the leather jackets. He said that because there were so many men in the org, they had gotten a significant discount on the men's jackets but not on the women's jackets, and it wouldn't be equal or fair, he argued, to give the women leather jackets that cost a little more than the men's jackets. We were told that if we wanted leather jackets, we women needed to find jackets that were the same price as the bulk-order price of the men's jackets. 

I forwarded this absurd chain of emails to HR, and they requested to meet with me shortly after. I don't know what I expected after all of my earlier encounters with them, but this one was more ridiculous than I could have ever imagined. The HR rep began the meeting by asking me if I had noticed that *I* was the common theme in all of the reports I had been making, and that if I had ever considered that I might be the problem. I pointed out that everything I had reported came with extensive documentation and I clearly wasn't the instigator (or even a main character) in the majority of them - she countered by saying that there was absolutely no record in HR of any of the incidents I was claiming I had reported (which, of course, was a lie, and I reminded her I had email and chat records to prove it was a lie). She then asked me if women engineers at Uber were friends and talked a lot, and then asked me how often we communicated, what we talked about, what email addresses we used to communicate, which chat rooms we frequented, etc. -  an absurd and insulting request that I refused to comply with. When I pointed out how few women were in SRE, she recounted with a story about how sometimes certain people of certain genders and ethnic backgrounds were better suited for some jobs than others, so I shouldn't be surprised by the gender ratios in engineering. Our meeting ended with her berating me about keeping email records of things, and told me it was unprofessional to report things via email to HR.

Less than a week after this absurd meeting, my manager scheduled a 1:1 with me, and told me we needed to have a difficult conversation. He told me I was on very thin ice for reporting his manager to HR. California is an at-will employment state, he said, which means we can fire you if you ever do this again. I told him that was illegal, and he replied that he had been a manager for a long time, he knew what was illegal, and threatening to fire me for reporting things to HR was not illegal. I reported his threat immediately after the meeting to both HR and to the CTO: they both admitted that this was illegal, but none of them did anything. (I was told much later that they didn't do anything because the manager who threatened me "was a high performer").

I had a new job offer in my hands less than a week later. 

On my last day at Uber, I calculated the percentage of women who were still in the org. Out of over 150 engineers in the SRE teams, only 3% were women. 

When I look back at the time I spent at Uber, I'm overcome with thankfulness that I had the opportunity to work with some of the best engineers around. I'm proud of the work I did, I'm proud of the impact that I was able to make on the entire organization, and I'm proud that the work I did and wrote a book about has been adopted by other tech companies all over the world. And when I think about the things I've recounted in the paragraphs above, I feel a lot of sadness, but I can't help but laugh at how ridiculous everything was. Such a strange experience. Such a strange year. 

Note: I am temporarily disabling comments because there are too many for me to keep up with! 
 

Comments (501)

Newest First Subscribe via e-mail
sonya  
  

i'm so sorry you had to go through that..... I can't begin to imagine. Yikes.

Brettopia  
  

This is horrible. I considered a job with Uber but decided not to move forward. I'm glad now. Then again, it was with HR, so maybe I could have helped to change the culture. Probably not.

Carl  
  

Interesting story thanks. A lot of high performers in the company lol.

Cromulent Green  
  

Please name and shame all these people.

Marianne  
  

Thanks for sharing your story. I found it from a friend on FB and shared it with more friends there. What a horrible, sexist culture.

Me  
  

Where are the screen shots?

Leigh  
  

This is crazy! Thank you for sharing

Suzanne  
  

Thank you for sharing. I am so sorry you had these unprofessional encounteres. Bring information to the public is the only way to get change. Please post this on glass door.com

You are brave and fearless! Go lady ho

Adam  
  

Post all of your documented evidence after blurring out the private details. We need to see if it is really sexism or feminist delusion. It is very commonplace to whine about sexism and call everything sexist in the Bay Area. So I am very skeptical of this story.

Analiese  
  

Thank you for sharing. Please sue!!!!!!

Wang  
  

I cannot imagine that a company like UBER would allow that thing to happen, shame on the HR team and the stupid management layer.
Susan,I was touched by your courage and integrity, please keep on fighting.

G M  
  

You should hire an attorney and file a lawsuit for gender discrimination. It sounds like you have all the documentation you need.

Rosamund  
  

Thank you for being brave and sharing this. As a woman working in tech, it means a lot.

GonzoI  
  

I've heard and seen some horrible things, but never an organization so institutionally backwards as this. And I have worked for politicians in government offices where firing to make room for people who helped the campaign is considered expected. It's undoubtedly different as a male in a male-dominated industry, so I can't begin to understand the situation, but I'm shocked you stayed after the first incident, let alone all the others. Telling you that your boss might retaliate on your performance review and that there was nothing that could be done about it is absolutely insane. It's frankly astonishing that with so many victims you haven't been asked to join in a class action lawsuit against Uber over this. It's bad enough that the organization itself should be dismantled.

T  
  

Thank you for sharing this. You were courageous and strong and a role model on not tolerating sick behavior in the workplace.

Stephen  
  

Good work op. You showed a lot of courage. Thanks for sharing.

Cheryl  
  

A good reminder re: HR. They are never on the side of the employee and always represent the interests of the company they work for. As appalling as this story is, it's not an isolated one. We women (and many men) have had to deal with this kind of treatment across the board, at all levels, in all fields. That it continues at all is reason enough for Feminism to exist. Clearly, we have a LONG way still to go.

PS  
  

Wow...this is sickening but doesn't surprise me one bit. HR is often the watch-dog of upper-management, not the champion of employee rights. Yet another illustration of crap women have to keep wading through just do do their jobs. Keep on fighting!

noreenqueen  
  

its my first time to register a blog and i dont know what to do

Simba  
  

Ok who is moderating these comments - and why are harmless comments not being posted? Happened to both me and my friend now. Our third friend who commented after us got his comment posted though! This is some real filtering bull crap...

Jamieson Eileen  
  

I was bullied by two coworkers at a large company and, for over a year, kept a log, reported incidences, politely requested to be removed from the team... but because myself and these women, who made making my life hell into a sport, were "high-performers" I wasn't moved and they weren't reprimanded. After almost 2 years, despite loving my work, I finally had to quit. Sometimes, a company only cares about the company. I'm sorry you had to go through this and appreciate that you didn't stop fighting to be heard. Even though it was clear Uber would not listen.

SG  
  

Stop being the typical Indian women who writes until there is nothing left. We want to know what you are saying in a quick manner, we have other things to do!

Rob Frankel  
  

Nicely done, kiddo.

Jules  
  

You're awesome and brave for posting this. Thanks for sharing. I'm so sorry this happened to you. Although not surprising as this happens daily at big tech companies. I had a similar situation at Google. HR didn't do anything when I reported my mgr. They said it was my perception, blocked my transfer off the team, and let him give me a negative performance review. Hopefully this will create more awareness and foster change.

Grady  
  

Thank you so much for sharing this incredibly important account, and I thank you for being willing to bring light to it.

Robert Glennie  
  

Uber are in New Zealand. I think I'll stick with the local tried and true taxi companies after this.

Milla  
  

Thank you for sharing!!

Andy  
  

What a pirate ship, terrible! I have never seen or heard such behavior in my 20 years of professional employment.

Michael Lissack  
  

I just deleted my Uber account and will urge everyone I know to do the same. This kind of behavior is disgusting. That it lasted for over a year is unbelievable. There really is no way to fix this.

LSY  
  

But wait -- didn't Uber hire a "Diversity and Inclusion" coordinator? What was that person's roll?

M  
  

Nothing to do with Uber. Its what is faced by women and minorities all the time. Im sure the company will sort this out, but fact is this can happen anywhere.

Sasha  
  

Wow, that gives me a look into Uber, I will cancel my application.

Gloria  
  

Thank you for sharing this. Unfortunately I'm going through the same issues with an all-male management at Apple within the iTunes organization. I found your story to be very inspiring.

Angela  
  

Putting your story out there is incredibly risky, and you will probably get a lot of haters and headache for your effort.

But, as a woman in tech: Thank you so much for making your voice heard. Thank you for sticking your head out. Thank you for your strength and bravery.

Bob  
  

Travis should apologize and hire you back as a director.

Ken  
  

I drove for Uber for 3 years and I hated them the entire time. I was racially abused/threatened and they still kept on the customer and did nothing to make me feel comfortable. #IHateUber

Tom Limoncelli  
  

I'm glad you wrote this up and made it public! People that don't believe sexism happens in the workplace anymore need to read these kind of stories. I hope your new company is 1000x better!

Seattle Startup  
  

I worked for a startup in Seattle that was fully funded by an investor from Texas and a silent one from Russia. Our CEO was a friend of mine but the investor brought in three young blond girls who had been his "admins" at a former job and we trained them and then watched as they were promoted to all be directors. The CEO said Ivo (the investor) wanted a cute face for the company and it was just a title right? We were still the ones doing the work.

At our first all staff meeting (people lived in Seattle, Milwaukee, Texas, Boston) they had a 50 shades of gray theme and at our team dinner Ivo's guest of honor was a guy who ran a sex toy importing company. About 1/3 of the team were women and the jokes they owner and CEO were making were so childish and sexist after dinner I stood up and left without saying anything in public. I did text the CEO and said I felt that making jokes about buying lubricant in bulk would be cheaper than hand sanitizer was rude and bang.. I was let go the next day. "not a team player"

James Roper  
  

How does this still happen today? I hope things are much better for you at Stripe.

Emerald  
  

Ash, no one deserves to be SEXUALLY HARASSED. This story isn't unique to Uber and other companies with more "ethical" practices have similar issues, so your argument is invalid. Please come back with a better one :)

Cristian Márquez Russo  
  

Thank you for sharing this! My team and myself are with you!

Greg  
  

Doesn't surprise me. My interview experience with UBER gave me a sick feeling. Everyone protrayed an arrogance that they were above everything/everyone.. including their own peers. The pay/bonus structure incentivize a cutthroat atmosphere... like a pack of hienas that would eat their first born.

Sam  
  

Yikes. Very sorry you had to endure this. Congratulations on all that you accomplished despite the hostile work environment at Uber and may you continue to find success at Stripe.

Reyhane  
  

WOW! It really hurts to hear such things. Great courage! You did a great job.

Zac  
  

Thank you for sharing. It's unbelievable how much you put up with, and your commitment to professionalism and the quality of your work is beyond impressive. The sexism you experienced is truly disgusting, but your tenacity is heroic.

Kelsey Taylor  
  

I dealt with similar situation while working at lyft and google in marketing. It happens everywhere so all the people saying they will be going to lyft just look stupid to me honesty. I hope you stop using google and lyft if you are gonna be dramatic

Jenkins  
  

Admire your strength. Different situation but similar HR and managerial denial in a federal job. Closer to retirement but immediately found the right employment attorney and began my fight of workplace discrimination three years ago. Winning several battles, and soon the war. managers have a hard time telling the same story in affidavits....

Elizabeth  
  

All the men reading this are surprised. All the women are thankful you posted it.

Brint  
  

Thank you for sharing. I'm a guy, and I wouldn't want to work in an environment where women, or anyone else, is treated like this. I'm sure you're going to kill it at Stripe and anywhere else you go.

Morena Fiore-Kirby  
  

I am sorry you had to go through this. I am shocked and very sad. I hope you find companies and teams where you are appreciated and loved. I am proud of people like you out there but I hope you don't have to ever experience in this again, not even for one second. No matter how good the projects, the colleagues or the companies you might work for, it really is not worth it!
Morena

    本站是提供个人知识管理的网络存储空间,所有内容均由用户发布,不代表本站观点。请注意甄别内容中的联系方式、诱导购买等信息,谨防诈骗。如发现有害或侵权内容,请点击一键举报。
    转藏 分享 献花(0

    0条评论

    发表

    请遵守用户 评论公约

    类似文章 更多