Former Facebook exec Chamath Palihapitiya: Uber is 'the great American tragedy playing out'
uber travis kalanick
uber travis kalanick

Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images

  • Over the course of 2017, Uber went from one of the most admired companies in Silicon Valley to one of the most vilified.

  • Many executive heads have rolled including former CEO Travis Kalanick.

  • But investors also have responsibility in how a company is run, one famous VC and former Facebook exec argues. He applauds Uber's biggest VC, Benchmark, for the drastic steps it took this year. 



The wave of scandal and controversy that washed over Uber this year has been nothing short of spectacular. But the sad truth is, almost any Silicon Valley startup could be the next Uber.

That's because every startup is encouraged to begin operating with the same "growing at all costs" playbook that Uber relied on, says Chamath Palihapitiya, the outspoken founder of venture capitalist firm Social Capital. Palihapitiya is a successful VC whose firm has backed companies like Box, Slack, SurveyMonkey, Yammer. He's trying to disrupt the VC world by doing things like investing in startups automatically, without ever meeting them and taking them public in a novel way, too.

But Palihapitiya is perhaps best known as an early manager at Facebook who helped that company navigate through many of its own early-days of scandals. 

He recently said he feels "tremendous guilt" about Facebook's role in the world these days saying that social networks are "destroying how society works," and adding, "In the back, deep, deep recesses of our mind, we kind of knew something bad could happen." (Facebook shot back at Palihapitiya, noting that the company was much different when he left six years ago)

Now, as a VC, he believes that while the CEO and executives should shoulder the blame for a startup's questionable decisions, VCs also play a part. They fund the startups, sit on the boards and advise these CEOs. 

Uber is the ultimate example. It's fall from grace this year is "the great American tragedy playing out in a company," Palihapitiya recently told Business Insider. 

All startups must 'grow at all costs' – at first

All successful company go through several chapters and the first chapter is always about survival, an "existential ... I am going to die ... fight or flight" stage, Palihapitiya says.

In this first stage, "Everybody’s order is to grow at all costs," he says. 

Chamath Palihapitiya
Chamath Palihapitiya

Brian Ach/Getty Images for TechCrunch

"Most companies fail because they’re run by people who do not have the wherewithal to fight through the fear [of failing]."