
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Most of us think about Uber as a true digital disrupter. Yet, there is a very large human side to Uber. When a driver, a rider or “an eater” (someone ordering food through Uber Eats) needs help resolving something that can’t be addressed purely in-app, they contact Community Operations, an organization of some 30,000 people run by Troy Stevenson. In this episode, Troy describes how he helped Uber navigate its rapid growing pains. He also has something many customer-focused executives would envy: vast amounts of real-time customer data, most of it in modern, accessible databases. In this podcast, he shares some of the ways that he makes sure that data gets turned into action, and talks about why that’s both a science and an art.
By Rob Markey, Bain & Company partner and customer experience expert4.9
4444 ratings
Most of us think about Uber as a true digital disrupter. Yet, there is a very large human side to Uber. When a driver, a rider or “an eater” (someone ordering food through Uber Eats) needs help resolving something that can’t be addressed purely in-app, they contact Community Operations, an organization of some 30,000 people run by Troy Stevenson. In this episode, Troy describes how he helped Uber navigate its rapid growing pains. He also has something many customer-focused executives would envy: vast amounts of real-time customer data, most of it in modern, accessible databases. In this podcast, he shares some of the ways that he makes sure that data gets turned into action, and talks about why that’s both a science and an art.

977 Listeners

4,368 Listeners

1,451 Listeners

1,083 Listeners

30,266 Listeners

197 Listeners

3,984 Listeners

168 Listeners

351 Listeners

6,056 Listeners

146 Listeners

5,472 Listeners

9,799 Listeners

160 Listeners

162 Listeners