Cancel 2018. 3
<-- sched 2, MJ sched 1
Whitman's CEO shove could harm campaign message
In her bid to be California's next governor, Meg Whitman has frequently cited her tenure as chief executive of eBay to contend she has what it takes to run the nation's largest state government. But that may no longer be the best talking point. The New York Times' Brad Stone reports today that Whitman once paid off an eBay employee who had threatened to sue after the then-CEO shoved her during a work argument.
Neither Whitman nor the employee in question, Young Mi Kim, would discuss the matter in detail. But Stone, citing interviews with current and former eBay employees who spoke anonymously about the incident, say the run-in happened in June 2007, when Whitman became angry while Kim, an eBay press handler, was preparing the CEO for a media interview.
According to the accounts, Whitman "forcefully pushed" Kim — or, as Whitman argued, "physically guided" her — out of a conference room. Either way, Kim retained a lawyer and left the company, later receiving what Stone says was a payout in the neighborhood of $200,000. In October 2007, Kim returned to eBay, where she still works today.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20100615/pl_ynews/ynews_pl2609
lol...meg didn't need to form a committee to tell her whose ass to kick, she kicked ass right away, now thats leadership
j/k....interestingly, the lady went right back to work for ebay...likely a light shove, get $200,000 "bonus" and get job back with ebay....thanks meg!
In her bid to be California's next governor, Meg Whitman has frequently cited her tenure as chief executive of eBay to contend she has what it takes to run the nation's largest state government. But that may no longer be the best talking point. The New York Times' Brad Stone reports today that Whitman once paid off an eBay employee who had threatened to sue after the then-CEO shoved her during a work argument.
Neither Whitman nor the employee in question, Young Mi Kim, would discuss the matter in detail. But Stone, citing interviews with current and former eBay employees who spoke anonymously about the incident, say the run-in happened in June 2007, when Whitman became angry while Kim, an eBay press handler, was preparing the CEO for a media interview.
According to the accounts, Whitman "forcefully pushed" Kim — or, as Whitman argued, "physically guided" her — out of a conference room. Either way, Kim retained a lawyer and left the company, later receiving what Stone says was a payout in the neighborhood of $200,000. In October 2007, Kim returned to eBay, where she still works today.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20100615/pl_ynews/ynews_pl2609
lol...meg didn't need to form a committee to tell her whose ass to kick, she kicked ass right away, now thats leadership
j/k....interestingly, the lady went right back to work for ebay...likely a light shove, get $200,000 "bonus" and get job back with ebay....thanks meg!