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Billions of reasons to be reckless

Fully Charged
Bloomberg

Hi, everyone. It's Shira. "Uber, but for short-term restaurant and warehouse jobs," sounds like a startup pitch circa 2015. But the actual Uber Technologies Inc. is now expanding a test of a temporary staffing program.

I've been skeptical of Uber and other logistics companies that say they can capably match supply and demand for a host of goods and services. But this could work. There are several million drivers in Uber's network, some of whom might be interested in picking up other flexible work. With U.S. unemployment at low levels, many businesses are eager to find good workers, too.

The staffing story also reminded me how quickly the balance has shifted from Uber's promise to its reality. Before Uber's IPO flopped in May, there was more patience for the company to experiment to get even bigger and broader. Now, apart from this relatively low-stakes staffing project, the pressure is on for the company to focus on what works right now.

Facing investor doubts and a 33% share decline from its IPO, Uber recently pledged to deliver adjusted profits much more quickly than anyone had expected. Uber is on the clock to prioritize its most promising businesses and markets, and throw overboard many projects that can't relatively quickly pay for themselves. You can see can that in Uber's cost-cutting, ongoing discussions to sell its food-delivery business in India, and its discontinued restaurant-kitchen rental pilot project.

Uber has backed away before from cash-burning businesses with uncertain payoff. There is more urgency now for Uber to change the balance between the future and the now.

Other companies will or are confronting this shift. Post-IPO share declines of Uber, Lyft Inc., Snap Inc., Pinterest Inc. and other richly valued former startups reflect in part investor skittishness about funding fast-growing but sometimes cash-hungry businesses. More young companies will be judged by what they are doing, rather than what they might be able to accomplish in a starry future. 

The sudden impatience about startups also has trained a spotlight on the SoftBank Vision Fund, which is all about encouraging short-term losses to fulfill outsize promise. If you haven't already, it's essential to read this Bloomberg Businessweek story about how the Vision Fund operates.

Its strategy of arming startups with bazookas of cash means they must think very big to generate bazooka-like returns. That creates sometimes perverse incentives. In one episode detailed in the story, SoftBank's powerful leader yelled at an underling for steady but slow progress at a portfolio company. A SoftBank-backed automated pizza startup was urged to chase a reorientation of the U.S. food production system.

The struggles of SoftBank-backed Uber and WeWork are justifiably calling attention to the downsides of motives to grab for the the biggest potential outcome at any cost. WeWork wasn't "elevating the world's consciousness." It was a real estate arbitrage company burning piles of SoftBank's money to find growth, with little oversight because no one had an incentive to confront the warning signs. 

WeWork is the worst-case scenario. But it's also true that the abundance of capital available to certain kinds of superstar companies in the last decade has enabled some very big and handy ideas. 

Uber and similar services couldn't exist in their current forms without mountains of capital. Cash-burning Netflix Inc. couldn't exist without people willing to bankroll a globe-spanning digital television network.

The last decade's bazookas of cash brought many good ideas to life. Bad news: They might not be financially viable when those bazookas run out of ammo. And it also means there are rich motivations for outlandish ideas pursued with recklessness.Shira Ovide

And here's what you need to know in global technology news:

Instagram Won't Let Influencers Promote Vaping Products Anymorearrow
Instagram is finally making rules to govern content in influencer advertising.
Uber to Pay $4.4 Million in a Harassment Settlementarrow

Uber agreed to pay $4.4 million after an EEOC investigation into alleged sexual harassment and retaliation at the company.

'We Need to Break Her Down': Three Women Allege Harassment at Tech Startuparrow

Three women sued fintech company Synapse Financial Technologies Inc., alleging harassment and discrimination. A spokeswoman for Synapse said the claims misrepresent the culture at the company.

YouTube burnout is real. Creators are struggling to cope.

arrow

The pressure to churn out fresh YouTube videos for fans is the dark side of the influencer economy. 

 

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