The CEO of Intuit (who make financial software) did an interview, and it seems a pretty normal interview. But some senior guy at the company asked for part of the interview to be deleted, after it took place.
By putting in that unusual request (rather angrily), more attention is being drawn to the interview.
Thoughts?
[Drops everything to read the article. ]
No one from Intuit has any business asking an interviewer to, essentially, falsify data that can easily influence share price. If Goodarzi can’t take the heat in an important interview, then her minions failed to prep her adequately. That’s a “you” problem, Miss “I am Intuit”, not the reporter’s problem.
Sasan Goodarzi is a man, btw.
Ah, thank you.
For now
The hell does that mean? They are a shithead CEO, doesn’t need to be more than that.
Eh. Honestly, the line of “questions” was rather stupid.
“Why aren’t you lobbying to make your business irrelevant” is essentially what the interviewer pushed aggressively.
Sure, I get calling out a CEO for deflecting tough questions with corporate BS. But it was a pretty dumb line of questioning in the first place.
Why isn’t Google lobbying for privacy protections?
Why isn’t Comcast lobbying for net neutrality?
Just make your statement and ask for comment. “Our listeners consider Intuits lobbying against tax reform that would benefit tax payers to be adversarial to their customers. What would you say to them?”
Step 1: go on record
Step 2: punch self in crotch
Step 3: have someone else angrily insist you didn’t and/or that should be stricken from the record because you yelped.
Everything looks by-the-book here.
Decoder podcast which this is from and specifically Nilay Patel is awesome, if you’re not subscribed check it out
https://pca.st/podcast/01a33f10-fcfe-0132-18b7-059c869cc4eb
There’s a good episode a few months back where the CEO of Logitech tries to justify the mouse subscription.
He’s also one of the hosts of the Vergecast https://pca.st/podcast/5cda9490-4117-012e-1622-00163e1b201c