Bangkok Post

Uber president quits after six months on job

Reason for departure not immediatel­y clear

- HEATHER SOMERVILLE

SAN FRANCISCO: Ride services company Uber Technologi­es Inc has been thrust deeper into turmoil with the departure of company president Jeff Jones, a marketing expert hired to help soften its often abrasive image.

Jones quit less than seven months after joining the San Francisco-based company, an Uber spokesman said on Sunday.

The reason for his departure was not immediatel­y clear, but Jones’ role was put into question after Uber earlier this month launched a search for a chief operating officer to help run the company alongside chief executive Travis Kalanick.

Jones had been performing some of those COO responsibi­lities. He joined Uber from Target Corp, where he was chief marketing officer and is credited with modernizin­g the retailer’s brand.

“We want to thank Jeff for his six months at the company and wish him all the best,” an Uber spokesman said in an emailed statement.

Jones is the latest in a string of high-level executives to leave the company.

Last month, engineerin­g executive Amit Singhal was asked to resign due to a sexual harassment allegation stemming from his previous job at Alphabet Inc’s Google.

Earlier this month, Ed Baker, Uber’s vice president of product and growth, and Charlie Miller, Uber’s famed security researcher, departed.

Technology news site Recode first reported Jones’ departure on Sunday.

Uber, while it has long had a reputation as an aggressive and unapologet­ic startup, has been battered with multiple controvers­ies over the last several weeks that have put Kalanick’s leadership capabiliti­es and the company’s future into question.

A former Uber employee last month published a blog post describing a workplace where sexual harassment was common and went unpunished.

The blog post prompted an internal investigat­ion that is being led by former US attorney general Eric Holder.

Then, Bloomberg released a video that showed Kalanick berating an Uber driver who had complained about cuts to rates paid to drivers, resulting in Kalanick making a public apology.

And earlier this month Uber confirmed it had used a secret technology programme dubbed “Greyball,” which effectivel­y changes the app view for specific riders, to evade authoritie­s in cities where the service has been banned.

The company has since prohibited the use of Greyball to target local regulators.

Uber is also facing a lawsuit from Alphabet’s self-driving car division that accuses it of stealing designs for autonomous car technology known as Lidar. Uber has said the claims are false.

Jones joined Uber in August and was widely expected to be Kalanick’s No. 2. He was tasked with overseeing the bulk of Uber’s global operations, including leading the ride-hailing programme, running local Uber services in every city, marketing and customer service, and working with drivers.

The Independen­t Drivers Guild, an organisati­on that advocates for Uber drivers, on Sunday was critical that Jones “has left the company without making a single improvemen­t to help drivers struggling to make a living,” said Ryan Price, executive director of the guild.

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