A 19-year-old who quit school to work at a $250 million startup says she was fired after complaining about 'objectification, marginalization, and harassment'
perry coneybeer ripcord
perry coneybeer ripcord

Coneybeer

  • A former female employee of high-flying startup Ripcord said she was fired after reporting harassment and a toxic environment at the company.

  • The former employee charged that Ripcord CEO discussed pornography in front of her and made a lewd comment about her.

  • Ripcord said it is investigating the allegations.



Last August, 19-year-old Perry Coneybeer faced a tough choice — go back to Northeastern University for her sophomore year or accept a full-time job with Ripcord, the San Francisco Bay Area startup where she had just completed a summer internship.

Though concerned about leaving school, she decided to take the job, thrilled about the opportunity to work with a high-flying robotics company and earn some cash for college to boot. But her excitement soon turned to disillusionment, because instead of being a great place to work, she felt subjected to a hostile workplace culture that she said embraced lewd behavior, and, at the extreme, graphically sexual conversations about pornography and prostitution.

And after she officially complained about the culture, she was fired — along with the Ripcord cofounder who had stood up for her.

"In spite of my initial excitement, my experiences [at Ripcord] left me severely discouraged," Coneybeer said in a blog post she wrote about her time at the company. "The objectification, marginalization, and outright harassment I observed and experienced in my eight months there have made me realize that this is a story that needs to be shared."

In a statement Ripcord said its board of directors is investigating the allegations and is "committed to taking appropriate action, if any, based on the results of the review."

"Ripcord cares deeply about fostering a positive workplace culture. Respect and integrity are absolutely integral to our ability to succeed," the company said in the statement.

Coneybeer's story comes amid a larger conversation about workplace culture in Silicon Valley and corporate America in general. Last year, a memo written by former Uber engineer Susan Fowler alleged sexual harassment and a hostile working culture at the $68 billion startup. Fowler's memo not only led to Uber CEO Travis Kalanick's resignation, it helped spark a movement that has exposed sexism and sexual harassment within the tech industry and elsewhere.

What makes Coneybeer's charges — the latest in a long line against tech companies — particularly notable is that Ripcord is a high-profile startup with big-name backers.