A woman who previously worked for the former Meta Operational Chief, Sheryl Sandberg claims she was tasked with designing the “conversation points” for her boss while she was working with her first child.
Sarah Wynn-Williams, the author of an explosive memory of her six-year-old mandate in the company that was then known as Facebook, wrote a sharp rating of Sandberg, including a claim that she invited to be-
Wynn-Williams, who was director of public policy on Facebook, recalled to play her firstborn birth in January 2014 in her new title of the book “Careless People: A Warning Tale of Lost Power, Greed and Idealism”.
“I receive a message,” she wrote. “Shel will suddenly go to a meeting with Brazil’s president in Davos and she wants speech.”
Wynn-Williams shared Sandberg’s rigid work ethic in the light of her best book 2013 “Lean in: Women, Work and the will to lead”, which encourages women to be more ambitious in their careers as they affirm themselves on corporate boards.
“I’m in the delivery room, my legs in riots, at work,” Wynn-Williams wrote. “I lowered my phone and reach my laptop. I start the design. “
Her husband, Tom, who was near, was extraordinary, according to the book.
“What are you doing?” He asked.
“Just taking Sheyl some conversation points,” Wynn-Williams responded to her husband, according to memories.
“Sarah, no,” her husband told her.
But Wynn-Williams continued.
“I keep writing,” she wrote. This is when her husband “appeals to my doctor, a person he knows I respect deeply …”
But Wynn-Williams insists on doing the job by doing despite being “between contractions”, telling her husband and the doctor: “Two minutes.”
According to Wynn-Williams, the doctor “reaches up and gently close my laptop”.
“She says, ‘it’s a very special thing to give birth to your first baby. I don’t think you have to work through her. Shel will understand.’
“She will not,” replied Wynn-Williams. “Please let me push me to send.”
This is when the doctor responds: “You need to push. But not send. ”
Wynn-Williams wrote that “[d]Despite disapproval in the room, “it” reopen quickly[ed] Laptop. “
“I send the email. I know what this looks like, and I can’t protect it. “
Wynn-Williams wrote that she was “shame” even though she “could not blame this completely on Facebook”.
“I’ve been this kind of person by car all my life. I don’t like letting people down. But it is also true that on Facebook, I didn’t feel like I had a choice, ”she wrote.
The post has requested comment from Sandberg and Facebook Meta’s parent company.
Wynn-Williams also claimed in the book that Sandberg spent $ 13,000 in the interior on herself and another subordinate, her personal assistant “Sadie”, and that she was frustrated when Wynn-Williams refused to invite “to come”.
According to Wynn-Williams, Sandberg and Sadie would get the curves sleeping on each other’s lap and hitting each other while traveling.
Sandberg has so far refused to comment on the claims.
Wynn-Williams has also accused another meta executive, Joel Kaplan, of her sexual harassment. Meta said she conducted a long internal investigation into the claims.
“This is a mixture of old and previously reported claims about the company and false accusations for our leaders,” spokesman Meta Post told.
“Eight years of action, Sarah Wynn-Williams was fired for poor and toxic performance, and an investigation at the time determined that she made deceptive and unfounded accusations of harassment.”
“Since then, it has been paid by activists against phase and this is merely a continuation of that work. Whistleblower’s status defends communications to the government, not unhappy activists trying to sell books.”
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