Uber's search for new CEO is a bumpy ride
Getting rid of Travis Kalanick may have been hard for Uberâs investors and board of directors. But replacing him could prove harder.
As the companyâs board inches ahead in its search for a new chief executive to run the embattled ride-hailing company, candidates are dropping out before theyâve even met with every board member. Kalanick himself is rumored to be angling for a return, and some investors question whether any candidate could fill its departed leaderâs shoes.
In other words, this is not a typical job opening.
âTheyâre trying to hire someone for two very differ ent roles,â said Bradley Tusk, an early investor in Uber who is not involved with the boardâs CEO search.
The company needs a leader who can implement the recommendations of a report by former U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. to change Uberâs culture of bullying and harassment, secure deals and eventually lead the firm to an initial public offering. It takes âone type of manager,â Tusk said, to get that job done.
On top of that, Tusk said, the incoming CEO must fill the void that Kalanick supporters believe he left â" that of a tenacious visionary who can help Uber grow into a company that competes with the likes of Apple, Google, and Amazon.
âAnd thatâs a very different kind of person,â Tusk said.
The candidates whose names have been floated â" such as Hewlett Packard Enterprise CEO Meg Whitman and departing GE chief Jeff Immelt â" fall into the first category of manager, thanks to their experience running large legacy businesses. People with knowledge of the matter said that Whitman, who has start-up experience from her time at EBay, was viewed as a promising candidate, but she announced on Twitter last week that she was not considering the role. Recode reported that she had not yet met in person with every board member at the time of her announcement.
Immelt is still believed to be in the running.
Uber declined to comment on the process of hiring a new CEO.
The difficulty of the boardâs CEO search has been compounded by internal disagreements.
The companyâs board currently consists of Kalanick, Uber co-founder Garrett Camp, Uber executive Ryan Graves, media entrepreneur Arianna Huffington, Nestle executive Wan Ling Martello, TPG Capitalâs David Trujillo, Yasir bin Othman Rumayyan of the Saudi Arabia public investment fund, Didi Chuxingâs Cheng Wei and Benchmarkâs Matt Cohler. Huffington was supportive of Kalanick when he was CEO and said in interviews that she believed he was capable of change, although she later advised him to consider resigning after investors, led by Benchmark, pressured Kalanick to step aside. It is unclear which candidates the board currently favors.
As the board of directors continues its search, sources close to Kalanick have said the Uber co-founder, w ho resigned in June after mounting pressure from investors, wants to come back and run the show. Recode reported Sunday that Kalanick had told several people that he was âSteve Jobs-ing it,â a reference to the Apple co-founder who was fired from his role as CEO, only to return years later to lead the company to global dominance.
Kalanick did not respond to a request for comment.
The appointment of a new CEO is an opportunity for Uber to signal to investors, employees, drivers and consumers that, after spending the last eight months embroiled in political and legal controversy, it is turning over a new leaf.
After developing a well-earned reputation as a combative and competitive company that is hostile toward women, the company has tried to make amends. In addition to firing employees who were found to have contributed to the companyâs toxic culture, accepting Kalanickâs resignation and bringing on high-profile women executives such as Bozoma Saint John from Apple and Frances Frei of Harvard University, the company launched an initiative to curry favor with drivers, who have long felt that the company under Kalanickâs leadership didnât listen to them.
Even if Kalanick could somehow tip the vote in his favor, reinstalling him as chief executive any time soon would undermine the companyâs messaging that it is changing its ways, one investor said.
The fact that Kalanick was such an overpowering force within Uber when he was its CEO could also make him a tough act to follow, according business and branding experts.
âItâs almost like the first boyfriend or girlfriend you get after a breakup,â said Andrew Gilman, president of crisis communications firm Commcore Consulting Group. âWhoever comes in, thereâs a chance theyâll be fabulously successful, but thereâs a better chance theyâll be the rebound, where theyâll have to go through one CEO before they get a really good one.â
A âreally good one,â in the eyes of in vestors, is someone with Kalanickâs vision combined with the temperament and experience of the Whitmans of the world. If Uber could only have one, though, business experts such as Brent Goldfarb, an associate professor of entrepreneurship and strategy at the University of Maryland, believe itâd be wise to prioritize responsibility before ingenuity.
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