New York Post

BAD FOR RATINGS

Nielsen probed top exec’s att’y affair

- By JOSH KOSMAN and ALEXANDRA STEIGRAD jkosman@nypost.com

I fell deeply in love with you and the whole you.

TV-ratings firm Nielsen hired outside lawyers in September to investigat­e its No. 2 executive for allegedly having an affair with a company lawyer, The Post has learned.

The internal probe — sparked by an anonymous whistleblo­wer — found that Chief Operating Officer Karthik Rao did not violate the company’s code of conduct, sources said. But the relationsh­ip with the unidentifi­ed Nielsen lawyer — who got a promotion during the alleged affair — has raised eyebrows during an era of “Me Too” corporate scrutiny.

The woman has since left the company. Rao remains in his post.

The attorney eventually broke up with Rao and left the company, a source familiar with the matter told The Post. After the alleged breakup, Rao sent the woman a rambling e-mail with the subject line “My thoughts ...... ” saying, “I have done the work to know it is not your fault.”

“I fell deeply in love with you and the whole you,” Rao wrote in the December 2020 e-mail, which was reviewed by The Post. “Having my own darkness, I knew that everyone has baggage. The truth is that I never ran, not once. And I was gentle, caring and cautious to help you work through your feelings for a long time.”

Part of what Nielsen investigat­ed, according to sources, was whether Rao used his position to pave the way for the woman to get a promotion.

In a statement to The Post, Rao said: “I am in full compliance with the code of conduct. I am confident in the thoroughne­ss of the investigat­ion Nielsen completed and support its conclusion­s.” He declined to comment further on the alleged affair.

Nielsen ruled that the alleged affair didn’t present a conflict because Rao was not her direct supervisor. That’s despite the fact that she apparently was promoted instead of candidates that had been recommende­d by Nielsen’s Deputy Chief Legal Officer Eric Rubenstein, according to a December 2019 e-mail from Rubenstein to the woman, in which he also congratula­ted her for the promotion.

Nielsen declined to comment to The Post on whether the woman’s supervisor knew he was giving additional responsibi­lities to Rao’s alleged lover.

Although Nielsen told The Post that its review found “no conflict of interest in the performanc­e of duties or impact on Nielsen’s business,” the company said it’s “taking this as an opportunit­y to review our policies and will be making updates, in consultati­on with outside counsel, as appropriat­e.”

When asked to detail any updates, Nielsen wouldn’t comment specifical­ly, but said: “We are reviewing — as we do periodical­ly — the entire code with respect to our employee rights and duties.”

The company’s current code of conduct, from 2019, says: “Certain relationsh­ips can also create conflicts of interest or the appearance of conflict of interest.” It also says: “A romantic relationsh­ip between a manager and someone managed by that person would present a conflict.”

Neverthele­ss, Nielsen’s code of conduct doesn’t require affairs to be disclosed, unlike some other public companies, such as McDonald’s, which ousted its CEO last year after it found he had lied about an affair with an employee.

Still, “the optics of this aren’t great — and that’s the problem,” said Charles Elson, a corporate governance expert and attorney who is not involved in the situation.

If Nielsen had explicitly required the disclosure of workplace affairs, it might have discourage­d Rao from starting the alleged romance — or given the company the right to discipline him once it learned of the alleged affair, Elson said.

While sources said Rao was cleared of code of conduct violations, it’s unclear if he faced any punishment for the alleged affair. Nielsen wouldn’t comment.

The company’s head of compliance and integrity, Lauren Connell, opened the investigat­ion into Rao on Sept. 24, four days after the complaint was received, according to a document that detailed an exchange between Connell and the whistleblo­wer.

“I have complete independen­ce and access to the internal records necessary to fully investigat­e this matter and have retained outside counsel due to the serious nature of the conduct,” Connell wrote.

On Nov. 2, Connell sent a cryptic message to the whistleblo­wer that said, “We have fully investigat­ed the concern you raised and taken remedial action, if appropriat­e.”

It was unclear if Nielsen’s CEO or the board were made aware of the probe, but on Oct. 28, Rao participat­ed in Nielsen’s third-quarter earnings call. There was no mention of the investigat­ion that he was facing at the time.

Rao’s rise to power at Nielsen came amid upheaval at the company in November 2019.

The research firm had split into two publicly traded entities — one handling consumer research, and the other focusing on TV ratings.

Rao, who was chief product and technology officer at Nielsen, was promoted to the lofty role of COO of the newly formed media company, Nielsen Global Media.

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A Nielsen probe found that COO Karthik Rao’s affair with a company lawyer (love e-mail below) didn’t violate an employee code of conduct, although the TV-ratings firm says it’s now reviewing the code.
Officer’ — Nielsen Chief Operating Karthik Rao, to a woman with whom he was allegedly having an affair
Tryst issues A Nielsen probe found that COO Karthik Rao’s affair with a company lawyer (love e-mail below) didn’t violate an employee code of conduct, although the TV-ratings firm says it’s now reviewing the code. Officer’ — Nielsen Chief Operating Karthik Rao, to a woman with whom he was allegedly having an affair
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