Skip to main content

Spotify founder Daniel Ek is stepping down as CEO

Spotify CEO Daniel Ek has announced that he’s stepping down as CEO, two decades after founding the music streaming service. Ek will transition to an executive chairman role at the company on January 1st, 2026, with Spotify co-presidents Alex Norström and Gustav Söderström set to step in as co-CEOs.

“As Executive Chairman, I will spend more of my time on the long arc: strategy, capital allocation, regulatory efforts, and the calls that will shape the next decade for Spotify,” Ek said in a statement. “Gustav and Alex will continue to report to me, and we will work closely together with our Board of Directors.”

As co-presidents, Norström currently serves as Spotify’s chief business officer, while Söderström leads the company’s product and technology unit. Ek says his new executive chairman role reflects a European setup, and that he will retain a hands-on approach to shaping the future of the company.

Spotify has been internally working towards these leadership changes for years, according to Spotify board director Woody Marshall. “We have tremendous confidence in Alex and Gustav as they step into these roles,” Marshall said. “They each have more than fifteen years with the company and have been instrumental in driving our success and enabling Spotify to lead our industry.”

Alongside steering Spotify, Ek is now shifting focus towards his other business interests. “A personal note on what’s next for me. I am often asked, ‘How do we build more Spotifys out of Europe?’ That’s why several years ago, I announced my intention to help create more of these supercompanies — companies that are developing new technologies to tackle some of the biggest challenges of our time,” Ek said.

In June, Ek’s investment company Prima Materia led a €600 million (about $700 million) investment round into German drone maker Helsing, with Ek serving as Helsing chairman. Pointing to the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, Ek said at the time that “there’s an enormous realization that it’s really now AI, mass and autonomy that is driving the new battlefield.”

Several artists, including Deerhoof, Massive Attack, Xiu Xiu, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, and King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard pulled their music catalog from Spotify’s streaming service following the Helsing investment. In an interview with The Verge, Deerhoof drummer Greg Saunier said the band “did not want our music, and particularly our music success, to be funding AI battle tech.”



from The Verge https://ift.tt/kevG5EI

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pandora Stories lets artists add commentary to their own playlists

Pandora launched Stories today, a tool that lets artists and creators add voice commentary to their own playlists. The Stories feature merges podcasts with music playlists, and is meant for artists to add context to an album, or for podcasters to experiment with new storytelling formats. The feature is part of Pandora AMP, the streaming service’s free Artist Marketing Platform that helps creators promote their work. To kick off the launch, Pandora’s prepared some Stories by artists like John Legend and Daddy Yankee, who tell listeners their personal stories interspersed between their own songs. There’s also a Stories playlist called Love Songs That Aren’t Really Love Songs , which includes commentary on individual songs like a podcast... Continue reading… from The Verge - All Posts https://ift.tt/2Xz1oNc

Nomad’s 3-in-1 MagSafe Charger and the Sonos One are down to their best prices

Nomad’s minimalist Base One Max 3-in-1 is on sale for $95. | Image: Nomad Fancy phone chargers are nice, but they’re often too expensive to justify the cost. Nomad’s Base One Max 3-in-1 is one of those rare unicorns that delivers a lot of value for your money, however, thus making it worth the splurge. After all, the device can simultaneously charge a MagSafe-compatible phone, your Apple Watch, and a pair of AirPods (or another Qi-compatible device) — that’s something not even Nomad’s forthcoming Qi2 charger can do. What’s even better is that Nomad is currently selling the hefty, MagSafe-certified charger in both black and silver for its Black Friday price of $95 ($55 off). Designed with metal and glass, Nomad’s minimalist slab will look slick on any desk or bedside table. It’s also powerful, delivering up to... Continue reading… from The Verge - All Posts https://ift.tt/25YJfqR

Asus’ foldable laptop goes on sale for $3,499.99

The Asus Zenbook 17 Fold OLED, more or less fully unfolded.  | Photo by Monica Chin / The Verge Asus’ first foray into the world of folding-screen laptops, the Zenbook 17 Fold OLED, is now on sale for $3,499.99, the company has announced . Asus says the laptop is being sold in the US via B&H and Newegg though as of this writing only Newegg seems to have the laptop available for immediate shipping, with B&H listing it as “coming soon.” That aligns with the Q4 target date given to us when we reviewed the laptop in August . At $3,499.99, Zenbook 17 Fold OLED is eye-wateringly expensive, but my colleague Monica Chin points out that it’s the first such device that starts to deliver on the promise of this new form factor. You can either use the laptop with its 17.3-inch 2560 x 1920 screen fully unfolded and paired with a bluetooth keyboard... Continue reading… from The Verge - All Posts https://ift.tt/P4q7sej