Om Behind the Startup
"Behind the Startup stands to be a groundbreaking ethnography that will shift the conversation about technology, automation, and the future of work by refocusing our attention on the problem of venture capital. This book gave me a whole new way to understand how the gig economy works."--Ben Snyder, Williams College "Through captivating ethnographic storytelling, Behind the Startup by Benjamin Shestakofsky reveals the financial incentives that structure startup life and the organizational logics that animate the tech industry. This is a deeply insightful and important exploration of the high-stakes world where innovation, money, and labor collide."--danah boyd, author of It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens "Behind the Startup reveals the inner-workings of a high-tech startup--exposing how venture capitalists' demands drive inequality among startup workers. Shestakofsky's thought-provoking insights draw from rich ethnographic data of both onshore and offshore sites. A phenomenal study and a must-read!"--Megan Tobias Neely, Assistant Professor, Department of Organization, Copenhagen Business School "Plenty has been said about what venture capitalists can do for young firms. But we know very little about what venture capital actually does to firms and especially the people who work for them. Based on a year and a half of deep fieldwork, Shestakofsky shows us how venture capital's demands and expectations shaped the concerns, the jobs, and the lives of the founders, engineers, and contractors employed by a startup that developed one of the first online labor platforms. Like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, Shestakofsky pulls back the tech economy's curtain to reveal why only a handful of those who labor in Silicon Valley's vineyards ever taste the wine they produce. Behind the Startup is bound to become a parable for our economic times. It deserves a wide audience."--Stephen R. Barley, Distinguished Emeritus Professor, UCSB, Emeritus Professor, Stanford University "This captivating, fast-paced study of AllDone--a pseudonym for a Silicon Valley unicorn--offers something no other profile of the platform economy or gig work has to-date: a clear view of the elitist practices that pump venture capital into young startups' work routines to produce that elusive ingredient known as disruption. While we have studies that trace the histories of Big Tech incumbents and narratives of scrappy inventors-in-garages, sociologist Benjamin Shestakofsky brings skillful attention to an overlooked piece of the organizational puzzle of the dot.com world: how investments in the very idea of tech upstarts deploy capital to upend consumer and labor norms more than anything of tangible value. The outcome is not so much the making of individual millionaires as the structural maintenance of logics of wealth accumulation through old-fashioned valuing of some human labor at the cost of others' daily routines. Shestakofsky's approach turns venture capital itself into a character that ensnares Silicon Valley, Las Vegas, and the Philippines, constantly upending and remaking what AllDone's global workforce sees as their role in filling the valuation lag that ultimately looks like an animal frantically chasing its tail. This book is both a valuable time capsule and a harbinger of what awaits us all if thinking like a venture capitalist invades every nook and cranny of our global economy."--Mary L. Gray, MacArthur Fellow and coauthor of Ghost Work: How to Stop Silicon Valley from Building a New Global Underclass "Shestakofsky takes us inside the world of Silicon Valley startups by centering venture capital's imprint on technology companies. This meticulous organizational ethnography examines the cultures of a globe-spanning firm whose workforce stretches from San Francisco and Las Vegas to the Philippines. A must-read for anyone interested in how technological innovations reproduce global and intersectional inequalities."--Kimberly Kay Hoang, Professor of Sociology, University of Chicago, and author of Spiderweb Capitalism: How Global Elites Exploit Frontier Markets and Dealing in Desire: Asian Ascendancy, Western Decline, and the Hidden Currencies of Global Sex Work
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