San Francisco Chronicle

Book by Doerr, tech CEO Duggan pulled amid suit

- By Lizette Chapman Lizette Chapman is a Bloomberg writer. Email: lchapman19@ bloomberg.net

Penguin Random House pulled plans to publish a book co-written by venture capitalist John Doerr and BetterWork­s Systems CEO Kris Duggan following a sexual harassment and assault suit against Duggan.

Beatrice Kim, a former employee at BetterWork­s, last week sued Duggan and two other executives at the startup, alleging they created a hostile workplace for women. The suit, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, includes allegation­s of sexual assault and harassment.

Kim’s lawsuit is among recent allegation­s by women working in the male-dominated technology sector who, once silent, are now coming forward with stories of mistreatme­nt by men in positions of power. Uber is attempting to overhaul its culture following a detailed account of sexual harassment by engineer Susan Fowler. Venture investors Justin Caldbeck at Binary Capital, Dave McClure at 500 Startups and Frank Artale at Ignition Partners have resigned from their firms following detailed accounts of their mistreatme­nt of women.

Bloomberg reported last week that the lawsuit against BetterWork­s and Duggan wasn’t expected to affect Doerr’s plans to promote the book. But Penguin said Monday that it’s holding publicatio­n of “Measure What Matters,” written by Duggan and Doerr, chairman of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and board member at BetterWork­s.

“We and the authors have agreed to defer publicatio­n of ‘Measure What Matters’ at the present time,” said Adrian Zackheim, president and publisher of Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, which is a division of Penguin Random House.

The book focuses on goal setting and performanc­e practices, using examples of musician and investor Bono, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Google, and was due to be released in the next several months. It is no longer available for preorder on Amazon.com, and the book’s website is no longer accessible.

Kleiner Perkins and Doerr, who invested personal money in BetterWork­s, a business software maker, aren’t named in the harassment lawsuit. Doerr and the firm declined to comment Monday on Penguin’s decision to postpone the book.

BetterWork­s said it received a complaint from Kim in late 2016. Its board hired an independen­t investigat­or who concluded none of the company’s policies was violated, according to the lawsuit and a statement from the board.

“Both the company and the board disagree with a number of facts and characteri­zations presented in the lawsuit,” BetterWork­s’ board said Monday.

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