Twitter’s Dick Costolo to step down as chief executive

Wall Street reacts positively to news with shares jumping 3.6 per cent to $37.17

Dick Costolo, Twitter’s embattled chief executive, at the New York Stock Exchange during the company’s market debut. Photograph: Richard Perry/The New York Times
Dick Costolo, Twitter’s embattled chief executive, at the New York Stock Exchange during the company’s market debut. Photograph: Richard Perry/The New York Times

Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo abruptly announced he was stepping down on Thursday amid increasing scrutiny of the company's slow user growth and inability to attract advertisers at the same rate as its competitors.

Mr Costolo will be replaced by co-founder Jack Dorsey on an interim basis. According to a source, it was Mr Costolo's decision to leave, and Mr Costolo said he brought it up with the board last year as it began talking about succession planning.

Twitter has had a number of shake-ups in its management. Co-founders Jack Dorsey and Evan Williams both served as chief executives of the company before Mr Costolo, and Mr Costolo has overhauled much of his management team over the past year. "Unfortunately this news isn't surprising," said Nate Elliott of management consultant Forrester Research.

“The bottom line is that Twitter isn’t very good right now at serving either its users or its marketers.”

READ MORE

Mr Costolo said on a conference call that Twitter will consider both internal and external candidates for its next chief executive and that it has the “strongest management team (it’s) ever had,” which influenced his decision to step down. In a statement earlier he said he was “tremendously proud” of his six years at Twitter.

In an interview with Reuters, Mr Dorsey said he was not thinking “at all” about remaining chief executive permanently because the search has just begun but did not rule out the job.

He also said he did not anticipate any change in Twitter's strategy or direction. Although he was ousted by management in 2008, Mr Dorsey said that he is now surrounded by a strong executive team and had learned from his experience running Square Inc.

Mr Dorsey said the chief executive search has not begun, but he noted the company was looking for a chief executive who uses Twitter every day and “loves” the product.

Mr Dorsey continues as chief executive of Square. He had served as Twitter’s president and chief executive from May 2007 to October 2008.

Wall Street reacted positively to the news, as Twitter shares rose to $37.17, up 3.6 per cent, after the announcement, meaning investors thought Twitter was worth $900 million more without Mr Costolo than with him.

Mr Costolo will step down on July 1 and will continue to serve on the board, the company said in a regulatory filing. Anthony Noto, Twitter's chief financial officer, said Mr Costolo did not receive a severance package because he voluntarily stepped down. Mr Costolo has agreed to cancel all of his remaining unvested equity in Twitter after July 1st.

Twitter has long struggled to gain users at the rate of other social media companies, such as Facebook Inc Instagram and Snapchat. "Twitter has never been great at giving its users reasons to come back. While other social sites have introduced new features and functionality the past few years,Twitter has mostly stood still. The result has been excruciatingly slow user growth," Forrester's Elliott said. Data firm eMarketer projects that Twitter's monthly user base will grow at 14.1 percent this year, compared to more than 30 per cent two years ago.

Twitter owned 1.6 per cent of the $50.7 billion US digital advertising market in 2014 compared with 1 per cent in 2013, according to eMarketer. That pales in comparison to Facebook, which increased its share from 7.6 per cent in 2013 to 10.4 per cent the following year.

Twitter's stock has also lagged some of its peers since its closing price after its first day of trading. Since November 7th, 2013, it has dropped 20 per cent, compared to a 72 per cent increase for Facebook, 9 per cent increase for Google and 27 per cent increase for Yahoo.

Chris Sacca, one of Twitter's earliest investors, posted an 8,500-word manifesto earlier this month calling on the company to better engage its users.

He simultaneously praised the company’s strong acquisitions of Periscope and TellApart, but Mr Sacca pointed out that one billion users had tried Twitter and left the service.

In a recent CNBC interview, Mr Sacca said that Twitter would be an “instant fit” for Google if it were to acquire the microblogging service. In a tweet Thursday, Mr Sacca wrote, “In under five years as CEO, @dickc grew Twitter from a $3b valuation to a $23b valuation. Credit where credit is due.”

Twitter reaffirmed its outlook for the second quarter of 2015, expecting revenue of $470 million to $485 million and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) of $97 million to $102 million.

Reuters