The once-swaggering company is losing more money and growing more slowly than ever. What happened?
“From the beginning,” the blog post began, “we’ve always been committed to connecting you with the safest rides on the road.” 
It was April 2014, and Uber was announcing a new $1 charge on  fares
 called the Safe Rides Fee. The start-up described the charge as 
necessary to fund “an industry-leading background check process, regular
 motor vehicle checks, driver safety education, development of safety 
features in the app, and insurance.”
But that was misleading.
 Uber’s margin on any given fare was mostly fixed, at around 20 to 25 
percent, with the remainder going to the driver. According to employees 
who worked on the project, the Safe Rides Fee was devised primarily to 
add $1 of pure margin to each trip. Over time, court documents show, it 
brought in nearly half a billion dollars for the company, and after the money was collected, it was never earmarked specifically for improving safety.
At
 the time, “driver safety education” consisted of little more than a 
short video course, and in-app safety features weren’t a priority until 
years later. The company was facing rising costs on insurance and 
background checks for drivers, but an eventual class-action lawsuit 
alleged that its marketing — which claimed “industry leading” checks and
 “the safest” rides — was untrue. Uber settled for some $30 million, a fraction of what the fee earned the company in revenue.
“We
 boosted our margins saying our rides were safer,” one former employee 
told me last year, as I was reporting a book about Uber. “It was 
obscene.” (Uber and its founder, Travis Kalanick, declined to comment 
for this article.)
That level of 
chutzpah is difficult to imagine from the chastened Uber of 2019. Two 
years since Mr. Kalanick’s ouster, and three months since a humdrum public offering, the company is in many ways a shadow of the juggernaut whose global presence once felt just shy of inevitable.
As
 a private start-up, Uber represented pure possibility — at its peak, a 
$69 billion wrecking ball threatening entities as vast as the taxi 
industry, mass transit networks and automotive giants, all at the same 
time. Mr. Kalanick built the company in his brutal and triumphant image,
 knocking through concrete at company headquarters to install luminous 
glass-and-black stone staircases — an aesthetic he described as “Blade 
Runner meets Paris.” It was a start-up that not only booked Beyoncé to 
play a staff party — it paid her with $6 million in restricted stock 
that quickly surged in value.
The 
public Uber displays little of this braggadocio, and competitors and 
critics are moving in. Labor activists are pushing back against the lack
 of worker protections for drivers, and legislation could push up the driver minimum wage
 in cities like New York. The hype around Uber’s autonomous cars has 
died down, and until they arrive — if they ever do — the company will 
have a hard time reducing the costs it incurs paying drivers.
In August, Uber posted its largest-ever quarterly loss,
 about $5.2 billion, as its revenue growth hit a record low. In cities 
around the world, Uber faces well-financed competitors offering a 
substantially similar product. And its food delivery business — a bright
 spot that executives point to for growth prospects — is in danger of 
becoming another cash-suck. Uber and most of its basically 
indistinguishable competitors (it names 10 of them in a recent filing) 
are subsidizing customers’ meals in a bid for market share, with 
profitability a secondary concern.
Investors are internalizing these challenges. Interest in shorting Uber 
stock
 has only grown since the I.P.O., according to share borrowing data from
 IHS Markit, with pessimists betting some $2 billion that the price of 
shares will continue to fall.

Dara
 Khosrowshahi, who replaced Mr. Kalanick as chief executive two years 
ago this week, is under pressure to cut costs wherever possible — laying
 off hundreds of marketing employees and even replacing the helium-filled balloons
 workers traditionally get on their hiring anniversary with stickers. 
Deflation is in the air. At a recent companywide meeting, one employee 
asked if the engineering division would be next to face reductions, a 
bad sign for a tech company in which morale rests on the ability to 
recruit the world’s top coding talent. (Uber has instituted a hiring 
freeze for some specific teams in the United States.)
In
 combing through documents, interviewing opponents and talking to more 
than 200 current and former employees while researching my book, what 
came up again and again was this sense of a public-private divide — that
 Mr. Kalanick had built a start-up that thrived on venture investment, 
blitzkrieg expansion tactics and an ethically questionable aggressive 
streak, but that the playbook made little sense for a publicly traded 
entity.
Mr. Kalanick required an 
almost hypnotic level of obedience from his staff in order to build the 
company he wanted. For that, he needed workers who were more than 
employees — he needed true believers.
The cult of the founder
The
 most vaunted title in Silicon Valley is, has been, and ever will be 
“founder.” It’s less of a title than a statement. “I made this,” the 
founder proclaims. “I invented it out of nothing. I conjured it into 
being.”
If this sounds messianic, that’s because it is. Founder culture — or more accurately, founder worship
 — emerged as bedrock faith in Silicon Valley from several strains of 
quasi-religious philosophy. 1960s-era San Francisco embraced a sexual, 
chemical, hippie-led revolution inspired by dreams of liberated 
consciousness and utopian communities. This anti-establishment 
counterculture mixed surprisingly well with emerging ideas about the 
efficiency of individual greed and the gospel of creative destruction. 
Technologists began building services to uproot entrenched power 
structures and create new ways for society to function. Over the 
decades, the ethos informed the creation of ventures like Apple, 
Netscape, PayPal — and Uber.
By 2009, 
when the company was founded, Silicon Valley saw a willingness to bend —
 and even break — the rules not as an unfortunate trait, but as a sign 
of a promising entrepreneur with a bright future. And people who knew 
Mr. Kalanick tended to remark on one thing: In every game he played, 
every race he entered, in anything where he was asked to compete against
 others, he sought nothing less than utter domination.
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Early
 on, the start-up was called UberCab — a high-end black-car service for 
“ballers.” But quickly, by 2011, Mr. Kalanick recognized a 
moonshot-sized opportunity for a global transportation company. As he 
saw things, realizing this vision would require playing a game that was 
already dirty. The standards for fair play in the transportation 
industry had been crossed years ago by what he viewed as a mass of 
corrupt politicians, all in the pocket of Big Taxi — a “cartel,” as he 
frequently called his giant, yellow-and-black adversary. They were bent 
on blocking any challengers to the multibillion-dollar market. That 
meant Mr. Kalanick had to recruit dedicated followers who were willing 
to do whatever it took to win.
This 
worldview created conditions for which Uber is still paying a price 
today. To run local branches around the world, Mr. Kalanick hired 
lieutenants who thought like him: ruthless and confident the money would
 never run out. He spun stories of Uber’s eventual ubiquity, providing 
“transportation as reliable as running water.” (Never mind, employees 
whispered, that water infrastructure isn’t always reliable in much of 
the world.) It wasn’t unheard-of for a new hire to enter Uber’s 
headquarters having never managed any significant enterprise, and be 
sent out to take over a new city.
Mr. 
Kalanick trusted his employees with significant power. Each city’s 
general manager became a quasi-chief executive, given the autonomy to 
make major financial decisions. Empowering workers, Mr. Kalanick 
believed, was better than trying to micromanage every city. In many 
ways, the approach was smart: A Miami native would be better prepared to
 meld Uber to their own city than a transplant from San Francisco. But 
the drawbacks were costly. City bosses rarely had to check in with 
headquarters, and they began greenlighting seven-figure promotional 
campaigns based on little more than hunches and data from their personal
 spreadsheets.
Other
 problems ranged from cultural — the New York office had a toxic bro 
culture that elicited harassment allegations and resignations — to 
legal. In Indonesia, Uber set up special “greenlight hubs” where drivers
 could quickly get inspections and other services, but the police 
threatened to shut them down over traffic concerns. Instead of moving 
the hubs, the local Uber managers decided to pay off the cops, with 
bribes of around 500,000 rupiah (about $30). They tended to take the 
money from petty cash, or forge receipts and submit them for 
reimbursement. The activity was the kind of corner cutting — and a possible violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
 — that allowed Uber to grow at unimaginable velocity, but with 
breathtaking risk. The Department of Justice is investigating the 
matter, as well as other activity in Malaysia, China and India, 
according to financial filings. 
‘I don’t want the F.T.C. calling me’
Ethics
 were not a hallmark of Uber’s first decade. Once, in a meeting with 
staff, Mr. Kalanick was presented with a delicious new secret weapon by a
 handful of engineers on “workation.” (A workation was an unofficial 
Uber tradition: Instead of taking time off to relax, employees would 
volunteer to spend a period working on any kind of project they wanted.)
 According to two people familiar with the matter, a group of employees 
pitched a prototype Uber feature that would repurpose certain parts of a
 driver’s smartphone — specifically, the accelerometer and gyroscope — 
to detect notifications that came from the app of Lyft, Uber’s biggest 
competitor. If Uber knew that a driver worked for its rival, Uber could 
market itself differently to the driver to entice them away.
In
 the meeting, the engineers described the project to managers, lawyers 
and Mr. Kalanick himself. The executives were excited but nervous. This 
could be a powerful new weapon in the war against Lyft. But detecting 
sounds in a driver’s car without permission was clearly invasive. After 
the presentation ended, Mr. Kalanick sat in silence. No one spoke.
“O.K.,” he said, 
breaking the tension and nodding his approval. “I think this should be a
 thing.” He stood up and looked the engineers in the eye: “I don’t want 
the F.T.C. calling me about this, either.” Mr. Kalanick thanked everyone
 for coming, turned toward the door and dismissed the meeting.
The
 feature, which would have outraged privacy hawks were it to become 
public, was never implemented. Other executives at the company later 
acknowledged the impracticality of building it, given simpler methods of
 tracking Uber’s competitors. 
Other 
poorly conceived ideas were put into practice, only to be cut loose 
after failing spectacularly. Take Uber’s ill-fated Xchange leasing 
program. At one point in Uber’s history, someone had the idea that there
 might be thousands of potential drivers who didn’t have enough 
collateral or credit history to secure a car loan. But Uber could 
overlook that and lease the cars anyway, requiring only that the lessee 
work off their obligation immediately by driving for Uber. The company 
began leasing to high-risk individuals with poor or nonexistent credit 
ratings.
It worked — sort of. Growth 
surged as people who were never before eligible for loans suddenly had 
access to vehicles. Thousands of new drivers came onto the platform, and
 the managers in charge were given hefty rewards. But it was the 
ride-hailing equivalent of a subprime mortgage. And just like 2008, the 
negative consequences came soon after.
Uber
 noticed that accidents and traffic infractions spiked after the company
 began the Xchange leasing program. They later figured out that many of 
the new drivers were the ones responsible. The managers had created a 
moral hazard, driving up insurance costs and potentially triggering a 
public relations and legal nightmare.
Despite all the driver growth, Uber found it was losing more than $9,000
 on each Xchange leasing deal, far above the initial estimated losses of
 $500 per car. Adding to the misery, many drivers found their credit 
even more damaged — all for a gig-economy job that returned less and 
less as the company garnished drivers’ wages.
Such
 episodes help illustrate why many drivers, an essential constituency, 
have little love for Uber today. And that’s before the company begins 
trying to replace them with autonomous cars.
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16 murders
For any start-up in Silicon Valley, there is no stronger imperative than growth.
It
 is the maxim by which every entrepreneur lives. From the moment a 
founder signs their first term sheet from investors, they’ve made a 
pledge to make the start-up grow, grow, grow. If your start-up isn’t 
growing, your start-up is dying.
But there’s growth, there’s growth at all costs, and then there’s Uber’s version
 of growth at all costs. By 2015, some company insiders believed Mr. 
Kalanick had an obsession with global expansion that crossed a line. He 
had tapped Ed Baker, a former Facebook executive, to increase South 
American ridership. In Brazil, Mr. Baker encouraged city managers in São
 Paulo and Rio de Janeiro to amass as many riders and drivers as 
possible. To limit “friction,” Uber allowed riders to sign up without 
requiring them to provide identity beyond an email — easily faked — or a
 phone number. Most Brazilians used cash far more frequently than credit
 cards, which meant that after a long shift, a driver could be expected 
to be carrying a lot of money.
Thieves
 and angry taxi cartels struck. A person could access Uber with a bogus 
email, then play a version of “Uber roulette”: They’d hail a car, then 
cause mayhem. Vehicles were stolen and burned; drivers were assaulted, 
robbed and occasionally murdered. The company stuck with the 
low-friction sign-up system, even as violence increased.
In 2016, Osvaldo Luis Modolo Filho, a 52-year-old driver in Brazil, was murdered by a teenage couple
 who ordered a ride using a fake name. After stabbing Mr. Filho 
repeatedly with a pair of blue-handled kitchen knives, the couple took 
off in his black S.U.V., leaving him to die in the middle of the street.
Mr.
 Kalanick and other Uber executives were not totally indifferent to the 
dangers drivers faced in emerging markets. But they had major blind 
spots because of their fixation on growth, their belief in technological
 solutions, and a casual application of financial incentives that often 
inflamed existing cultural problems. Mr. Kalanick was convinced that 
software made Uber cars inherently safer than traditional taxis, namely 
because rides were recorded and trackable by GPS. He held out faith that
 Uber could improve driver safety with code.
The
 fixes didn’t come soon enough. Mr. Kalanick’s product team eventually 
improved identity verification and security in the app for Brazilian 
customers, after intense pressure from product and marketing leaders. 
But not before at least 16 drivers in Brazil were murdered.
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‘Now is our time to prove ourselves’
Take away Uber’s unbridled bellicosity, and what do you have left?
A cash-burning enterprise with which investors are losing patience. A chief executive on a humility offensive, with the slogan “We do the right thing — period.” Stabs at new lines of business, like e-bikes
 and freight, with far-off promises that they will turn the company into
 a profitable “transportation platform.” Meanwhile, the core business is
 increasingly commoditized, as customers realize that many imitators are
 perfectly capable of getting them from A to B.
Mr.
 Kalanick deserves credit for creating a world-changing company, one 
that scaled vertiginously from a modest black car service in San 
Francisco to a global brand in hundreds of cities. Those who invested 
first saw staggering returns. One frequent customer, Oren Michels, cut 
Mr. Kalanick a check for $5,000 early on. By the end of 2017, the stake 
had multiplied in value some 3,300 times, worth more than $15 million.
The
 issue, as a number of financial commentators have pointed out, is that 
the gains have been captured almost entirely by pre-I.P.O. investors in 
the private market. Anyone who bought shares of Uber on the day of its 
stock market debut is in the red. Mr. Khosrowshahi, the C.E.O., has 
indicated that the company could lose money through 2021.
On
 the night of the I.P.O., at a party on the floor of the New York Stock 
Exchange, Mr. Khosrowshahi toasted his employees. They were holding Big 
Macs — a nod to the Uber Eats platform — and glasses of Champagne, and 
many of them were painfully aware that they personally owned a great 
deal of the declining stock. Mr. Khosrowshahi attempted to inspire the 
troops.
“Now is our time to prove 
ourselves,” he said. “Five years from now, tech companies that come 
I.P.O. after us will stand on this very trading floor and see what we’ve
 accomplished.” 
Using an expletive, he added, “They’ll say ‘Holy crap. I want to be Uber.’”
They might. The question is: which Uber?

 
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