Silicon Valley CEOs aren’t typically the kind to stick around in the same gig.
There are exceptions, of course. Jensen Huang has been running Nvidia since the year Bill Clinton took office. Though he’s twice shared the role, Marc Benioff has been on top of Salesforce since the New York Knicks were
last in the NBA Finals. And Michael Dell has been running his namesake company for a total of 39 years, not counting his three-year…well, let’s call it a sabbatical.
On Tuesday Dropbox co-founder Drew Houston, 43,
announced that he is stepping down after a 19-year run as CEO. Product chief Ashraf Alkarmi will step up to share the cloud storage company’s top gig for a temporary stretch, after which Houston will permanently transition to executive chairman. (Houston remains the company’s largest individual shareholder.)
“My focus right now is making sure Dropbox is in the strongest possible shape,” Houston wrote. “But knowing myself, it won't be long before I'm getting credit card alerts for my Cursor token spend.”
It’s been a wild ride. After
a spectacular 2018 IPO, Dropbox has worked to become profitable and
defend its turf as the entire category of cloud storage became a feature in bigger tech companies’ platforms. Today Dropbox earns half a billion dollars of profit on some $2.5 billion in annual revenue. Its shares loosely trade at about the same price as the company’s public debut.
The next chapter is all about AI, of course. Houston
told CNBC that he’s bullish on the company’s prospects amid the new world order: I’ve never met a Dropbox customer who’s like, ‘I’m just using so much ChatGPT I’m going to cancel my Dropbox subscription.’”
—AN