Parag Agrawal will take over as the new Twitter Chief Executive Officer (CEO) following Monday’s stepping down of co-founder Jack Dorsey from the position.
In a statement he posted on Monday, Dorsey said, ‘I’ve decided to leave Twitter because I believe the company is ready to move on from its founders,’
‘My trust in Parag as Twitter’s CEO is deep… It’s his time to lead,’ Dorsey said.
Dorsey, who also is chief executive of payments company Square, came under pressure in 2020 from Elliott Management amid concerns he had spread himself too thin by running both companies.
Dorsey will remain a member of the board until his term expires at the 2022 meeting of stockholders.
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Twitter in March 2020 made a deal with key investors to end an effort to oust the chief, creating a new committee on the board of directors to keep tabs on company leadership.
Like many Silicon Valley celebrities, from Mark Zuckerberg and Steve Jobs to Bill Gates or Michael Dell, Dorsey dropped out of college, never graduating from either of the universities he attended, one in his native Missouri and the other in New York.
Dorsey is credited with coming up with the idea for Twitter when eventual co-founder Evan Williams gave workers at blogging startup Odeo two weeks to work on fun new projects as a way to break up the daily routine.
He ran Twitter in 2007-2008 but returned as CEO after Dick Costolo resigned in June 2015.
Dorsey was pushed out of the chief chair his first time around, and at the time was said to have made a better engineer than boss, known to leave early for personal pursuits such as sewing or yoga classes.
Twitter’s incoming CEO Agrawal joined the company in 2011 and has served as chief technology officer since October 2017, where he was responsible for the network’s technical strategy.
Agrawal holds a PhD in computer science from Stanford University and a bachelor’s degree in computer science and engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology in Bombay.
Nasdaq briefly suspended trading of Twitter on Monday, citing ‘news pending,’ but the share was up 4.5 percent following the announcement.
AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK