TikTok Considering Systrom For CEO Role
TikTok Reportedly Considering Instagram Billionaire Kevin Systrom For Vacant CEO Role
Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom is interviewed live on stage during the 2019 SXSW Conference and Festival at the Austin Convention Center on March 11, 2019 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Jim Bennett/WireImage)WIREIMAGE
As TikTok and Oracle ORCL -0.7% work out an acquisition deal, the social media company is also thinking about who will be its next CEO after its last chief, Kevin Mayer, departed after only a few months.
One of the people in the running for the job is Instagram billionaire Kevin Systrom, who left Facebook in 2018, according to a New York Times NYT -1% story. The discussions between Systrom and Tiktok are only in the early stages, the Times reports. TikTok could not be reached to comment for this story. A spokesperson for Systrom declined to comment.
TikTok’s divestiture from its Chinese-owned parent company ByteDance very much remains a work in progress. Bloomberg reported this afternoon that the U.S. Treasury department has tentatively approved a deal that would leave TikTok’s U.S. operations largely in the hands of American stakeholders, including Oracle. ByteDance still needs to get approval from President Trump by Sunday, the day when a Trump-issued executive order goes into effect that would effectively ban TikTok in the U.S.
Mayer was seen as a strong choice when his hiring was announced in May. He had spent years at Disney DIS -1.2% overseeing its M&A deals and working on the launch of its streaming service, Disney+. But Mayer unexpectedly departed last month, saying he had not expected to be caught up in tensions between the U.S. government and China. Vanessa Pappas, TikTok’s general manager, has been serving as TikTok’s interim chief.
In Systrom, TikTok would get someone who has already created one social media giant—and someone immensely familiar with one of TikTok’s main rivals: Mark Zuckerberg. Systrom sold Instagram to Zuckerberg and Facebook in 2012 for almost $1 billion and then built it up to over a half-billion users before leaving.
Read more: forbes
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