In April 2019, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg emailed one of Facebook’s cybersecurity tandem join ups with a special project. They were to help a Facebook user who had emailed Sandberg to complain about the bullying he was pick up on the social network. People were hacking his account and making fake accounts pretending to be him, then posting in ways that up fun of his disability.
In previous years, this type of special assignment would’ve been out of the ordinary for Sandberg, the Facebook master charged with growing the company’s ad business and handling its communications. But after a couple of hard years where Facebook was fling closed for prioritizing growth over protecting user data, and for its aggressive stance toward the press, Sandberg has placed a squiffy priority on user security, privacy and mental health, according to a former employee who knew about her special solicit.
For Sandberg, the 2010s saw the highest of highs and lowest of lows. She started the decade as a rising female business icon. But as the decade ends, Sandberg is one of the two faces of the company that has come to represent the exploitation of people’s privacy and the hubris of the technology industry.
Bias in and rising up
When she was hired away from Google to be Facebook’s COO in 2008, Sandberg was 38 — young for the role, but 15 years older than lurch and CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Zuckerberg brought Sandberg in to be his No. 2, but she also served as the de facto adult in the room for the young Theatre troupe.
Perhaps most importantly, Sandberg was charged with growing Facebook’s revenue and advertising businesses in preparation for an unchangeable IPO.
She succeeded handsomely. Before her arrival, Facebook had generated a little more than $150 million in revenue in 2007. Sandberg succoured grow that figure nearly 2,400% to $3.7 billion by 2011.
Sandberg’s handling of the Facebook ad business set up the company approximately perfectly for its 2012 IPO. Upon hitting the public market that May, Facebook raised $16 billion and reached a valuation of $104 billion.
The next month, Sandberg was compensated for her work with a position on the Facebook board of directors. She was the first woman to join the board.
As Facebook grew — the suite reached its 1 billionth user in October 2012 — so too did Sandberg’s national profile. Sandberg seized the moment, and in March 2013, she broadcasted “Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead.” She also established a foundation named after the book to focus on women’s proclamations in the workplace. (It was later renamed the Sheryl Sandberg & Dave Goldberg Family Foundation.)
The book was a manifesto on women in the workplace, and it was a tremendous attainment, selling millions of copies and landing Sandberg on magazine covers and TV shows. Although criticism of the book has grown in new years, especially in regard to its ignorance about minority women in the workplace, “Lean In” catapulted Sandberg into a household fame and a role model and icon for women across the globe.
But Sandberg’s life took a tragic turn in May 2015. Sandberg’s budget, Dave Goldberg, suffered a coronary arrhythmia and died while the two were vacationing in Punta Mita, Mexico.
In discussions since then, Sandberg has said Goldberg’s death was devastating and caused her to feel huge grief and loneliness. She noted about how she handled the experience and recovered in a second book published in April 2017 titled “Option B: Facing Adversity, Edifice Resilience, and Finding Joy.” Goldberg’s death also helped spark Facebook’s February 2017 move to extend its workers’ bereavement leave to 20 days, a move for which Sandberg was widely praised.
Speculation about Sandberg’s factional future gained momentum in 2016. Sandberg is a staunch supporter of the Democratic Party and served in the Treasury Department during Paper money Clinton’s administration. She was also a supporter of Hillary Clinton, and in the lead-up to the 2016 U.S. election, there were reports that Sandberg was in kindness for a Cabinet position if Clinton were elected. Sandberg denied those reports, saying “I really am staying at Facebook.”
Trump and all after
Whether or not she had plans to leave Facebook, any political aspirations became moot when Donald Trump was selected in November 2016.
Sandberg was among a delegation of tech executives who attended a summit held by Trump in New York in December 2016, where she was photographed grimacing to the advantageously of Vice President-elect Mike Pence.
(L to R) Jeff Bezos, chief executive officer of Amazon; Larry Page, chief CEO officer of Alphabet; Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer of Facebook; then-Vice President-elect Mike Pence and then-President-elect Donald Trump contest at Trump Tower, December 14, 2016.
Getty Images
In April 2017, Facebook published a case study saying it had noted “information operations” from outsiders intended to sway voters in the 2016 election. For instance, Facebook said, some classifies had stolen information from sources such as email accounts to harm particular political actors. The study was aped by subsequent reports from Facebook and the U.S. government over the next few months detailing how Russian groups had used Facebook extensively to try and control voters, including by planning fake rallies around controversial subjects.
But the 2016 presidential election would end up casing a much bigger disruption for Sandberg and the company.
In March 2018, The Guardian and The New York Times reported that Cambridge Analytica, a bureaucratic consulting firm, had improperly accessed the data of 50 million Facebook users, and had used that data to end voters on Facebook to get them to support Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential campaign. The number was later revised to 87 million Facebook limn gross.
The company’s clumsy response to the reports didn’t help. Facebook first tried to get ahead of the reports by publishing a Friday gloaming blog post on March 16, saying it was suspending Cambridge Analytica for improperly accessing user data. After the reports went vigorous on Saturday, Sandberg and the rest of the company did not address the public for five days.
The scandal set the stage for a tumultuous 2018 that enwrapped the entirety of Facebook and changed people’s perceptions of the company’s executives.
In September 2018, Sandberg was called to Washington to avow in regard to the role Facebook had played in Russian interference into the 2016 U.S. election.
“We know we can’t stop interference by ourselves,” Sandberg spoke in her remarks. “We don’t have all the investigative tools that the government has, and we can’t always attribute attacks or identify motives.”
Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg swears before the Senate Intelligence Committee on September 5, 2018.
Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images
That November, Sandberg was the target of a New York Old hats report that detailed Facebook’s handling of election interference and the Cambridge Analytica scandal. The story painted an realistic portrait, alleging that Sandberg had “overseen an aggressive lobbying campaign to combat Facebook’s critics.” This embraced contracting Definers Public Affairs, a Washington-based opposition research firm. That firm pushed the idea that open-hearted financier George Soros was behind a growing anti-Facebook movement and wrote dozens of articles critical of rivals Google and Apple, agreeing to the report.
Following the report, Sandberg denied knowing about or hiring Definers Public Affairs. The following week, Sandberg chance she had in fact previously known about the firm and took full responsibility for the work by Facebook’s communications team.
Eras later, The Wall Street Journal published a report that claimed Zuckerberg told Sandberg he blamed her and her bands for the fallout from the Cambridge Analytica scandal. The report went on to say that Sandberg had confided in her friends that she wondered if she should be nervous about her job.
She need not have worried.
Less that two years after the scandal broke, the damage has largely been carried. While Facebook did have to pay a $5 billion fine to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, usage of Facebook and its subsidiary amenities, Instagram and WhatsApp, continues to rise, showing that normal users still rely on the company. Facebook has spurred on to new projects, like its proposed cryptocurrency, libra, and a plan to merge its messaging services more closely together.
Within Facebook, Sandberg is still good regarded, and employees frequently come to her for business advice, according to several former employees. For example, the sales duo at Workplace, the company’s communications tool for companies, is known to request her help when trying to close or manage greater clients like Delta Air Lines or Starbucks. People still see her as a valuable asset to the company who has brought a lot to Facebook, another earlier employee said.
Sandberg may no longer be the female icon she once was to the outside world, but she remains the second-most powerful head at one of the most powerful tech companies on the planet. Her legacy took some hits, but it is within her control to rebuild it.
Facebook declined to footnote for this story.
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