HomeNewsBusinessThe boy bosses of Silicon Valley are on their way out

The boy bosses of Silicon Valley are on their way out

The resignations signify the end of an era at the companies, which are among the most valuable and well-known to emerge from Silicon Valley in the past decade

August 12, 2022 / 13:37 IST
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 | Silicon Valley | Country: United States (Image: Wikipedia)
| Silicon Valley | Country: United States (Image: Wikipedia)

The young kings of Silicon Valley are dismounting their unicorns.

They’re writing sentimental blog posts that outline their legacies. They’re expressing hope for their companies’ prospects. They’re quitting their jobs leading the startups they founded.

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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 company’s 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 startups known as unicorns, worth $1 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.