|
The
boy bosses of Silicon Valley are on their way out
Profiles
California
Business
Media
Promotions
Silicon
Valley Comic Con 2016
Directory
Silicon
Valley (Wikipedia)

The
young kings of Silicon Valley are dismounting their
unicorns.
Theyre
writing sentimental blog posts that outline their
legacies. Theyre expressing hope for their companies
prospects. Theyre quitting their jobs leading
the start-ups they founded.
In
recent weeks, Ben Silbermann, a co-founder of digital
pinboard service Pinterest, resigned as CEO; Joe Gebbia,
a co-founder of home rental company Airbnb, announced
his departure from the companys leadership;
and Apoorva Mehta, founder of grocery delivery app
Instacart, said he would end his run as executive
chair when the company went public, as soon as this
year.
The
resignations signify the end of an era at these companies,
which are among the most valuable and well-known to
emerge from Silicon Valley in the past decade, and
of the era they represent.
In
recent years, investors have dumped increasingly large
sums of money into a group of highly valued start-ups
known as unicorns, worth $US1 billion ($1.4 billion)
or more, and their founders have been treated as visionary
heroes.
Those
founders fought for special ownership rights that
kept them in control of their companies a change
from the past, when entrepreneurs were often replaced
by more experienced executives or pressured to sell.
But
when the stock market fell dramatically this year,
hitting money-losing tech companies especially hard,
this approach began to change. Venture capitalists
pulled back on their deal-making and urged Silicon
Valleys prized young companies to cut costs
and proceed cautiously. The industry began to talk
of wartime CEOs who can do more with less,
while bragging about lessons learned from previous
downturns.
Patience
for visionaries wore thin. Founder-led companies started
to seem like liabilities, not assets.
All
of that changed in the last 90 days, and its
not coming back anytime soon, said Wil Schroter,
founder of Start-ups.com, an accelerator program for
young companies. The well figure it out
later story is no longer attractive to investors,
he added.
In
addition to Silbermann, Gebbia and Mehta, founders
at the top of Twitter, Peloton, Medium and MicroStrategy
have all resigned over the past year.
Theyre
not leaving on a high note. Shares of Pinterest are
down 60 per cent from a year ago. Elliott Management,
an activist shareholder known for pressuring companies
to make big changes, recently took a stake in the
company. Airbnb shares are down 25 per cent from a
year ago. And Instacart lowered its internal valuation
almost 40 per cent in March, as it prepares to go
public in a hostile market.
If
youre as already rich, famous and successful
as these guys, there usually comes a point where staying
in the saddle is less appealing than riding off into
the sunset.
University
of Pennsylvanias Kevin Werbach
Its
surely less fun being a CEO when markets are down,
the economy is trending negative and regulation is
increasing, said Kevin Werbach, a professor
of business at the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania. If youre as already rich,
famous and successful as these guys, there usually
comes a point where staying in the saddle is less
appealing than riding off into the sunset.
Im
CEO, bitch
In
start-up lore, Mark Zuckerberg pioneered the modern
boy boss. Carrying business cards that read, Im
CEO, bitch and ruffling Wall Street feathers
with his disrespectful hoodie, he demanded
investors let him keep a controlling interest in Facebook
as it grew, ushering in todays era of founder-friendly
deal-making.
Young,
ambitious men like Zuckerberg received similar protections
and leeway as venture capital firms rushed to appear
as accommodating as possible, lavishing the entrepreneurs
with perks (dinners, jets, celebrities) and services
(recruiting, public relations, design).
One
firm even publicly pledged to never vote against a
founder on company matters.
It
inspired our whole generation to believe in the impossible
that they could start companies, said Trace
Cohen, 34, an investor in very young start-ups.
Founders
took advantage of their upper hands. They stayed in
the top jobs, even when the companies outgrew their
skills as managers. And they kept their companies
private for as long as possible, avoiding pesky business
realities like turning a profit. They were given the
benefit of the doubt something female founders
rarely got.
As
the tech sector became a dominant force in our economy,
the cult of the start-up founder made its way into
popular culture via celebrities like Ashton Kutcher
and TV shows like HBO satire Silicon Valley.
Some
founders of this era took their latitude too far.
Adam Neumanns spending and partying got him
forced out of WeWork in 2018, even though he held
a controlling stake in the company. And Travis Kalanicks
aggressive tactics at Uber resulted in his ouster
in 2017, despite his super-voting shares.
The
rest mostly held on through the companies initial
public offerings. But it turns out that running a
publicly traded company, with its attendant fiduciary
duties, analyst calls and slog of quarterly earnings,
is a far cry from the hustle and thrill of start-up
life. Now, as troubles mount amid a market meltdown,
theyre giving up the power and control they
once fought for.
Losing
their halo
In
his announcement, Silbermann said that running Pinterest
had been the gift of a lifetime. Gebbia,
who will become an adviser to Airbnb, posted an effusive
reminiscence of the companys early days, alongside
photos, nicknames of his co-founders and lessons about
the goodness of humanity. Mehta tweeted that he cared
deeply about Instacart the one
thing I have thought about for every waking minute
of the last decade.
Leaving
as billionaires, they have emanated Silicon Valleys
relentless positivity. Pinterest is just getting
started, Airbnb is in the best hands its
ever been in and Instacart has a enormous
opportunity ahead, the founders wrote. Mehta
and Gebbia said they had plans for new projects.
Investors
say they anticipate more of these resignations from
founders who are realising they now have to work harder
for less (relatively speaking). Now, they can
let some executives step up, take over and grow it
with different incentives, Cohen said.
The
founders who have so far stayed on amid the downturn
and there are many, including at Stripe, Coinbase
and Discord can expect greater demands and
more pressure. Stock trading app Robinhood has laid
off more than 1,000 employees this year as it loses
active customers.
Making
matters worse, start-up founders have lost their halo
of positive cultural cachet a trend that began
during the tech backlash of 2017 and that has grown
with the release of devastating books and TV shows
about WeWork, Uber and other tech darlings.
Once
youve made a certain amount of money, youre
playing for status, and the status isnt there,
Hargreaves said.
Still,
theres always the comeback story. If the market
gets worse and companies start seriously tanking,
we could see the reverse dynamic of founders returning
to right the ship, said Werbach, the business professor.
It
would be a throwback to the original cult hero founder,
who commanded admiration long before unicorns roamed
the Valley and who even inspired Zuckerbergs
swaggering business cards.
He
was, perhaps, the original boy boss: Steve Jobs.
This
article originally appeared in The New York Times.
|