Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber
by Mike Isaac
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"A New York Times technology correspondent presents the dramatic rise and fall of Uber, set against the rapid upheaval in Silicon Valley during the mobile era. In June 2017, Travis Kalanick, the hard-charging CEO of Uber, was ousted in a boardroom coup that capped a brutal year for the transportation giant. Uber had catapulted to the top of the tech world yet for many came to symbolize everything wrong with Silicon Valley. In the tradition of Brad Stone's Everything Store and John show more Carreyrou's Bad Blood, award-winning investigative reporter Mike Isaac's Super Pumped delivers a gripping account of Uber's rapid rise, its pitched battles with taxi unions and drivers, the company's toxic internal culture and the bare-knuckle tactics it devised to overcome obstacles in its quest for dominance. Based on hundreds of interviews with current and former Uber employees, along with previously unpublished documents, Super Pumped is a page-turning story of ambition and deception, obscene wealth and bad behavior, that explores how blistering technological and financial innovation culminated in one of the most catastrophic twelve-month periods in American corporate history"-- show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
Halfway through and yes, it's quite remarkable. It is like the author was hiding behind doorways in some conversations.
So far, and admittedly I haven't seen all of it, I think it feels fair and even-handed, not over-sensational. The writing is also very good -- fast reading and I'm finding myself obsessed with this story.
It's hard not to compare it to Bad Blood, equally juicy. The difference is that we all saw this -- we were all riding Ubers and loving the convenience and celebrating the fact that is has transformed urban transportation.
And we all knew someone who worked there and hated the culture -- but who wanted to stay to cash out.
UPDATE: I am obsessed with this book and the story. I find it so amazing that such a large, show more transformative company was run just so poorly. I'm at the point where Bad Boy Travis is taking a break from the company -- and I do feel sorry for him, up to a point. I don't feel sorry for the enablers -- some whom I think Isaac let off pretty lightly. In fact, many of the characters he describes show up (at least up to this point) as quite admirable, such as the CTO Thuan Pham, among others.
I cannot wait to talk about this book with friends and observers. I am less sanguine that it cannot happen again, and again and again, because the whole startup/crazy money chasing the next big thing/bro culture has no reason to change.
UPDATE: finished the book and just raced through toward the end. I think everyone interested in startups/disruption and tech in general should read this book, for what it says about the whole cycle of money-funding-new-ideas.
Was riveted by the ins and outs of Benchmark's actions and how one of the most founder-friendly firms in Silicon Valley, could push out a CEO who controls the shares and the board!
Yes, I loved reading the book but am saddened the the problems will not go away because there's too much money sloshing around looking for the next big thing, with investors all FOMO about the next bro startup. Kalanick, who Mike Isaac described as having a philosophy of "Ayn Rand meets Wolf of Wall Street," is part of the system, not an outlier. Susan Fower's "very strange year" at Uber is happening again in firms all over, venture firms are ignoring women founders, and tools like AI propogate the same old ideas. Sigh.
Still, it's great to dissect how this very visible company jumped the shark, and keep the conversation going about how Silicon Valley, innovators, and investors can do much, much better.
OK, sermon over.
Thanks for reading. show less
So far, and admittedly I haven't seen all of it, I think it feels fair and even-handed, not over-sensational. The writing is also very good -- fast reading and I'm finding myself obsessed with this story.
It's hard not to compare it to Bad Blood, equally juicy. The difference is that we all saw this -- we were all riding Ubers and loving the convenience and celebrating the fact that is has transformed urban transportation.
And we all knew someone who worked there and hated the culture -- but who wanted to stay to cash out.
UPDATE: I am obsessed with this book and the story. I find it so amazing that such a large, show more transformative company was run just so poorly. I'm at the point where Bad Boy Travis is taking a break from the company -- and I do feel sorry for him, up to a point. I don't feel sorry for the enablers -- some whom I think Isaac let off pretty lightly. In fact, many of the characters he describes show up (at least up to this point) as quite admirable, such as the CTO Thuan Pham, among others.
I cannot wait to talk about this book with friends and observers. I am less sanguine that it cannot happen again, and again and again, because the whole startup/crazy money chasing the next big thing/bro culture has no reason to change.
UPDATE: finished the book and just raced through toward the end. I think everyone interested in startups/disruption and tech in general should read this book, for what it says about the whole cycle of money-funding-new-ideas.
Was riveted by the ins and outs of Benchmark's actions and how one of the most founder-friendly firms in Silicon Valley, could push out a CEO who controls the shares and the board!
Yes, I loved reading the book but am saddened the the problems will not go away because there's too much money sloshing around looking for the next big thing, with investors all FOMO about the next bro startup. Kalanick, who Mike Isaac described as having a philosophy of "Ayn Rand meets Wolf of Wall Street," is part of the system, not an outlier. Susan Fower's "very strange year" at Uber is happening again in firms all over, venture firms are ignoring women founders, and tools like AI propogate the same old ideas. Sigh.
Still, it's great to dissect how this very visible company jumped the shark, and keep the conversation going about how Silicon Valley, innovators, and investors can do much, much better.
OK, sermon over.
Thanks for reading. show less
I found the first few chapters of the book to be a bit slow and boring for me. But it sure picked up by the end. I found it hard to put the book down when all the political intrigue and corporate blood letting started.
Well researched book. One of the best business management books available. Excellent storytelling by Mike Isaac. Plenty of business and personal lessons for would be and actual entrepreneurs. Fascianting look at how a business idea starts, gets funded, rolls out and tries to survive in a very competitive and regulated environment.
Recommended for business majors but it’s an interesting and easy read story for those not seeking to be entrepreneurs.
Well researched book. One of the best business management books available. Excellent storytelling by Mike Isaac. Plenty of business and personal lessons for would be and actual entrepreneurs. Fascianting look at how a business idea starts, gets funded, rolls out and tries to survive in a very competitive and regulated environment.
Recommended for business majors but it’s an interesting and easy read story for those not seeking to be entrepreneurs.
Pretty amazing account of Uber by a journalist who was involved in the story. Doesn't really focus on all the great product innovation and other technical work done at Uber, but I guess that's a function of author and audience. Does include a lot of the drama within Uber (although far from all of it), and it's amazing how basically anything that touched Uber ended up covered in shit somehow.
Quick, fun read but not much meat on the bones.
Na een ontluisterende strijd om de macht werd Travis Kalanick, de oprichter en keiharde CEO van Uber, in juni 2017 door zijn eigen bestuur ontslagen. Kalanick had de taximarkt wereldwijd op zijn kop gezet. Uber was binnen de kortste keren meer dan een miljard waard en uitgegroeid tot een van de grootste techbedrijven ter wereld. Wat volgde was een regelrechte nachtmerrie. Oorspronkelijk titel "Super pumped. The Battle for Uber".
Nov 4, 2019Dutch
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Author Information
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber
- Original publication date
- 2019-09-03
- People/Characters
- Travis Kalanick; Garrett Camp
- Important places
- San Francisco, California, USA
- Related movies
- Super Pumped (2022 | IMDb)
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, Business, Technology, General Nonfiction
- DDC/MDS
- 388.4 — Social sciences Commerce, communications & transportation Transportation Local transportation
- LCC
- HE5620 .R53 .I83 — Social sciences Transportation and communications Transportation and communications Automotive transportation
- BISAC
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- Members
- 276
- Popularity
- 115,412
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.95)
- Languages
- Dutch, English, Portuguese (Portugal), Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 4






























































