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DemonGeminiX
11-11-2016, 10:51 AM
If you voted for Donald Trump, you may not feel welcomed at Grubhub.

The CEO of Grubhub, an online food delivery service, sent a company wide email Wednesday suggesting employees who agree with President-elect Donald Trump’s behaviors and his campaign rhetoric should resign.

“If you do not agree with this statement then please reply to this email with your resignation because you have no place here,” wrote Matt Maloney, Co-Founder of Grubhub. “We do not tolerate hateful attitudes on our team."

Maloney, a Hillary Clinton supporter, sent the email Wednesday afternoon with the subject line, “So…that happened…what’s next?” He made it clear in the email statement that he is personally stunned and deeply concerned with the results of Tuesday’s election.

“I absolutely reject the nationalist, anti-immigrant and hateful politics of Donald Trump and will work to shield our community from this movement as best as I can,” Maloney wrote about Trump’s supporters.

“I want to reaffirm to anyone on our team that is scared or feels personally exposed, that I and everyone else here at Grubhub will fight for your dignity and your right to make a better life for yourself and your family here in the United States.”

The CEO made it clear he’s particularly concerned Trump’s victory will empower others in his workplace to act out against marginalized groups.

“While demeaning, insulting, and ridiculing minorities, immigrants, and the physically/mentally disabled worked for Mr. Trump, I want to be clear that this behavior -- and these views -- have no place at Grubhub,” Maloney explained.

Adding, if it were up to him, Trump would have been fired a long time ago.

"Had he worked here, many of his comments would have resulted in his immediate termination.”

Maloney tells Fox News that "almost 20 percent” of his employees have personally thanked him for the note. “I am not embarrassed by it,” he said.

The CEO said that he deeply respects the right of people to vote for whoever they decide, but that he simply wanted to “reassure our employees that our company will actively support diversity and inclusion -- regardless of national politics.”

This letter is noteworthy because it underscores the fine-line between the intersection of politics and business, especially given the divisive presidential campaign of the past year and a half.

Bruce Tulgan, Author of “It’s OK to be the Boss,” calls the letter “extraordinary” because while a CEO has a right to build the kind of corporate culture he or she wants -- Tulgan advises business leaders to stay away from politics.

“Much of that message could have been communicated without making direct reference to the election,” Tulgan said of Maloney’s email. "Anytime you are talking about things that are not work at work you’re risking potentially alienating people, making people feel uncomfortable or un-welcomed at work."

Mark Horstman, co-founder of Manager Tools, says if he were advising Mr. Maloney -- he would have recommended he not send the note particularly because he's the CEO of a public company.

"That note could be construed by his employees that someone who voted for Trump could be fired," said Horstman, who suspects other CEOs have sent similar notes. "It has a chilling effect on people's perception of their rights."

While Maloney seemingly calls out Trump supporters at his company on the one hand, the young CEO boasted about the company’s supportive and inclusive culture on the other, saying he “firmly believes that we must bring together different perspectives.”

Evoking Clinton’s campaign slogan, Maloney says we are “stronger together,” and he ends his letter to his employees by echoing Clinton’s concession speech, saying Trump’s administration deserves our open minds and a chance to lead.

He ends the letter imploring his employees to “stay strong."
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:wah:

redred
11-11-2016, 10:53 AM
Is this a vegan food delivery place? :lol:

DemonGeminiX
11-11-2016, 11:01 AM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grubhub

RBP
11-11-2016, 11:43 AM
:stfu:

Teh One Who Knocks
11-11-2016, 11:47 AM
I would IMMEDIATELY file a lawsuit against him and the company.

Muddy
11-11-2016, 03:26 PM
Fuck that guy and his shitty food delivery service.

Loser
11-11-2016, 06:29 PM
Back up that email. Claim your love for trump, sue them out of business :twisted:

Teh One Who Knocks
11-12-2016, 11:32 AM
FOX News


http://i.imgur.com/6Y4ZVDl.jpg

Food delivery service Grubhub is leaving a bad taste in Donald Trump supporters' mouths.

The company is already feeling the financial repercussions of an internal email CEO Matt Maloney sent to employees Wednesday, with company shares falling 5 percent in the last 24 hours.

In the Apple iTunes store, the app now has new one-star reviews knocking Maloney's comments.

"I just heard about your CEO's leaked memo regarding President-Elect Trump. While his opinion is his prerogative, to assert that his employees should resign if they supported Trump is mean and manipulative," posted one user in a review titled "I'll never use GrubHub [sic] again."

In the email, first obtained by FoxNews.com, Maloney suggested that supporters of President-elect Donald Trump should resign, and the company would not tolerate “hateful attitudes” in the workplace.

On Thursday, Grubhub tweeted a response to the email with a link to a follow-up statement from Maloney indicating that his original comments had been misconstrued.

“I want to clarify that I did not ask for anyone to resign if they voted for Trump. I would never make such a demand. To the contrary, the message of the email is that we do not tolerate discriminatory activity or hateful commentary in the workplace, and that we will stand up for our employees.”

But many Grubhub users are furious with Maloney’s original statement against Trump and say they’re willing to for go the convenience of the delivery service--for good. Dozens have taken to social media using the hashtag #boycottgrubhub and have vowed never to use the platform again.

http://i.imgur.com/kTZ6Eqa.jpg

http://i.imgur.com/XyoHGpw.jpg

Many are calling for the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to step in.

http://i.imgur.com/DOZfYTv.jpg

But will Maloney's e-mail, and follow up comments, do irreparable harm to the brand?

Rick Crandall, Professor and Chair of Management, Marketing & International Business at the University of North Carolina, Pembroke says he believes the CEO's comment won't hurt Grubhub and believes the e-mails message of inclusion for all will resonate with both employees and consumers in the long run.

"It is really not an anti-Trump statement, but a pro-diversity statement. CEOs make key statements like this when they are trying to promote a certain organizational culture, sometimes called corporate culture," Crandall tells FoxNews.com.

"In context, he [Maloney] is supporting the corporate culture that already exists at Grubhub. The election just happens to be a handy prop. His statement about offering a resignation is to be taken with a grain of salt."

On Thursday, Maloney told Fox News that he was not "embarrassed" by the note and many employees had thanked him for the e-mail.

Chicago-based Grubhub Inc, which owns online ordering platforms Grubhub and Seamless, says it serves an average of 267,500 users daily across 1,100 U.S. cities.

Pony
11-12-2016, 09:48 PM
From a different article


Shares of GrubHub were down roughly 5 percent on the day, about -$1.70 per share, bringing the value of GrubHub stock down to about $35.37. Over the two days since Maloney’s statement was released, shares were down more than 9.4 percent total.
That’s a little over $300 million dollars in share value gone, simply because the company’s CEO is a precious snowflake who isn’t mature enough to know when to keep his mouth shut.

Hugh_Janus
11-13-2016, 08:35 AM
waaaaaaah... they don't agree with trump and said something controversial waaaaaah

Hikari Kisugi
11-13-2016, 12:04 PM
Thing is lots of things Trump says are shit, and not worth taking as views.
his actual presidency I'll bet won't garner half the vitriol and gubbins he spouted in the campaign.
I don't see Trump as a KKK man, even if the KKK seem to think he is.

People have assigned an anti-racial diversity thing upon him, by his statements, but I'm not convinced he will push this agenda in the slightest.
If an employee of man actively sought to exclude potential customers by blocking mussies, Hispanic or any such, or grab them by the pussy, I'd be unhappy.
Instead the media, bundled up in the shit storm they like to generate have ran with this, in the same way as they ran with the Trump comments during the election.

It's more bulbous shit from your media, which unfortunately seems to be how the country is now run.
People have given up on politican's (which isn't a bad thing) but they'll still lap up the spoon feeding from media sources, be they social media or mainstream.

The CEO is a dick for releasing anything that might affect the stock value of his company in such a detrimental manner.

RBP
11-13-2016, 03:13 PM
Thing is lots of things Trump says are shit, and not worth taking as views.
his actual presidency I'll bet won't garner half the vitriol and gubbins he spouted in the campaign.
I don't see Trump as a KKK man, even if the KKK seem to think he is.

People have assigned an anti-racial diversity thing upon him, by his statements, but I'm not convinced he will push this agenda in the slightest.
If an employee of man actively sought to exclude potential customers by blocking mussies, Hispanic or any such, or grab them by the pussy, I'd be unhappy.
Instead the media, bundled up in the shit storm they like to generate have ran with this, in the same way as they ran with the Trump comments during the election.

It's more bulbous shit from your media, which unfortunately seems to be how the country is now run.
People have given up on politican's (which isn't a bad thing) but they'll still lap up the spoon feeding from media sources, be they social media or mainstream.

The CEO is a dick for releasing anything that might affect the stock value of his company in such a detrimental manner.

Well said.