Tumblr founder David Karp steps down as CEO, COO Jeff D’Onofrio takes over
The microblogging platform’s business has struggled since selling to Yahoo in 2013.
Remember Tumblr? You’d be forgiven for having forgotten. Ever since Yahoo acquired the microblogging platform for $1.1 billion in May 2013, Tumblr has tumbled out of the zeitgeist. Four years after the acquisition, Tumblr remains, though its founder will not.
Tumblr founder and CEO David Karp is leaving the company, and its president and COO, Jeff D’Onofrio, will replace him, a spokesperson for Verizon’s Oath, the division that houses Tumblr, confirmed on Monday. The New York Times reporter Mike Isaac reported the news earlier on Monday through Twitter.
“David Karp will depart Oath by the end of the year. David founded Tumblr ten years ago as a space for the world’s creators, and we thank him for his commitment and passion driving the growth of the platform to almost 380 million blogs and over 155 billion posts. Going forward, Jeff D’Onofrio, President and COO of Tumblr, will continue to lead the team,” the spokesperson said in an emailed statement.
“I beg you to understand that my decision comes after months of reflection on my personal ambitions, and at no cost to my hopefulness for Tumblr’s future or the impact I know it can have,” Karp wrote in an email to Tumblr’s employees, which he published to his personal Tumblr on Monday.
The news of Karp’s departure may not be such a surprise. Once a social media success story, Tumblr has been a flop since being acquired by Yahoo. Agency executives have said that Yahoo had mismanaged the acquisition, leading Tumblr to fade from advertisers’ radar and fail to generate the revenue that Yahoo had anticipated. In 2014, Yahoo’s then-CEO Marissa Mayer said that Tumblr would generate more than $100 million in revenue in 2015. That never happened. Then in 2016, Yahoo wrote down Tumblr’s value by $712 million and even subbed in Facebook to help sell ads on Tumblr.
The timing of Karp’s departure also may not be such a surprise. When Yahoo acquired his company in 2013, he agreed to a four-year earn-out, over which time Yahoo would release his stock in the portal — whose sale to Verizon closed in June 2017 — as well as $40 million in cash, but he would only receive the full amount if he remained an employee for those four years, according to Yahoo’s regulatory filings. Now those four years are up, and Karp is out.
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