The Woman Hired To Turn Uber Around
Forbes Woman Africa|March/May 2018

She calls herself @badassboz on Twitter. The Ghanaian in Silicon Valley, Bozoma Saint John, is the woman tasked with changing Uber’s perception. Can she?

Peace Hyde
The Woman Hired To Turn Uber Around

IT’S EARLY EVENING AT A five-star hotel in Accra in Ghana, where a group of delegates from the European Union and Ghanaian government are meeting to discuss bilateral trade agreements. In the elegant lobby, an attendant mans the helpdesk, trying to resolve the queries of agitated guests who seem unimpressed with the long queues.

At one end of the room, a group of camera-toting journalists saunter aimlessly waiting for an opportunity to snap Ghana’s economic power brokers as they arrive.

Shortly after 7.30PM, the vice president of Ghana strolls in with his security detail and in one stroke, the lobby is bustling, flashes pop like corn and requests for sound bites are hurled in the air.

As the frenzy reaches a feverish pitch, we leave the commotion and make our way past an impressive art piece of Ghana’s first president, Kwame Nkrumah, part of a collection of over 1,500 pieces of art in the hotel. Our destination is the fifth floor where we meet Bozoma Saint John, Silicon Valley darling and Uber’s Chief Brand Officer since last year.

Hired to turn Uber back into a brand people love, Saint John has a daunting task ahead. The company has been hit with a number of scandals and allegations which led to the resignation of CEO Travis Kalanick last year, and the #deleteuber campaign.

In South Africa, Uber drivers have had several clashes with taxi drivers prompting the company to hire private security forces to protect them.

On meeting her, thoughts of Saint John’s herculean task are replaced with impressions of her imposing yet warm personality. Towering at 5’11’’, even sans her pink stilettoes, which she teams with a silver jumpsuit, braids and earrings made of Ghanaian Adinkra symbols, her powerhouse presence is hard to ignore in any room, surely an advantage in the male-dominated corporate space.

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