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Facebook 在 2021 年失去了一批人才——这是最显着的离职

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  发表于 Dec 27, 2021 03:30:56 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
对于 Facebook 来说,这是变化的一年。

该公司更名为 Meta,这是自 Facebook 2005 年去掉前缀“the”以来的第一次更名。借助新的绰号,该公司还宣布将把重点转向构建元宇宙,一个虚拟和增强现实体验的在线世界.

随着新绰号和战略转变,公司领导层发生了重大变化。

许多高级管理人员在 2021 年离职或宣布计划在未来几个月内离职。外流跨越了公司,从其 Novi 加密货币部门到 Facebook Workplace 商业软件部门。

以下是 Facebook 2021 年最引人注目的离职名单,按公布时间排序:

Facebook Marketplace 负责人 Deborah Liu 2 月离职,成为 Ancestry.com 的首席执行官。

首席营收官大卫·费舍尔 (David Fischer) 3 月宣布离职。 Fischer 曾担任该公司广告业务的负责人,并负责其全球销售组织。他的离职正值 Facebook 准备对 Apple iOS 进行隐私更改之际,这使得该公司更难提供个性化广告。

今年 6 月,Facebook 宣布,全球合作伙伴关系副总裁、Facebook 首席运营官雪莉·桑德伯格的密友 Marne Levine 将接替 Fischer,担任首席商务官的新角色。

Facebook Novi 加密货币部门的联合创始人之一凯文·威尔(Kevin Weil)于 3 月离职。他加入了本月早些时候上市的卫星图像公司 Planet。

韦尔是 Facebook 开发加密货币和数字钱包努力的核心。这款名为 Novi 的钱包最终于今年早些时候推出,由 Coinbase 提供技术支持。这种货币现在由一个独立的协会运营,被称为 Diem,仍未向公众发布。

在加入 Facebook 的加密货币团队之前,Weil Instagram 的产品副总裁,并在 Stories 产品的开发中发挥了关键作用,该产品向用户展示了 24 小时后消失的全屏照片和视频。

曾任虚拟现实副总裁的雨果·巴拉 (Hugo Barra) 5 月离开了 Facebook。巴拉曾是 Facebook 的重要雇员,此前曾担任中国智能手机制造商小米的副总裁,在此之前曾担任谷歌的 Android 产品管理副总裁。

本月早些时候,巴拉宣布他已加入 Covid-19 测试初创公司 Detect 担任首席执行官。

卡罗琳·埃弗森 (Carolyn Everson) 担任公司主要广告商的代言人。她在 6 月份表示,她将辞去 Facebook 全球业务集团副总裁的职务。在莱文被提拔接替菲舍尔并担任首席商务官的新角色后,埃弗森宣布离职。埃弗森已向菲舍尔汇报,两人携手合作。

离开后,埃弗森于 8 月前往 Instacart,担任杂货配送服务公司的总裁。她在 Instacart 的时间很短——三个月后她宣布离开。

埃弗森在 Facebook 工作了十多年,是继桑德伯格之后该公司最著名的女性高管之一。

过去两年担任 Facebook 应用负责人的 Fidji Simo 7 月离开 Facebook 后成为 Instacart 的首席执行官。 Simo 在公司工作了十年,从产品营销一路走来,成为 Facebook 最杰出的女性高管之一。她在通过自动播放视频、直播和 Facebook Watch 视频流产品为 Facebook 应用程序带来更多视频内容的举措中发挥了关键作用。

曾任 Facebook 增强和虚拟现实内容副总裁的迈克·维尔杜 (Mike Verdu) 7 月离开,加入 Netflix,担任游戏开发副总裁。 Verdu 在公司工作仅两年后就离开了,在那里他为 Oculus VR 头显工作。他之前曾担任电子艺界的高级副总裁。

在公司工作 10 多年后,前首席创意官马克·达西 (Mark D'Arcy) 8 月卸任。

Facebook 前公民诚信负责人 Samidh Chakrabarti 9 月离职。 Chakrabarti 创立了公司的公民诚信产品组织,负责确保其服务对于公民参与是安全的。该团队在 Facebook 处理 2020 年美国总统大选的过程中发挥了至关重要的作用,但该团队于 2020 12 月解散,就在 1 6 日美国国会发生叛乱之前。

离职后,Chakrabarti 成为 Twitter 上最直言不讳的前 Facebook 高管之一,经常就与公司相关的话题发表评论。

Facebook lost a bunch of talent in 2021 here are the most notable departures

It was a year of change for Facebook.

The company was reborn as Meta, its first name change since Facebook dropped the prefix “the” in 2005. With the new moniker, the company also announced it would shift its focus toward building the metaverse, an online world of virtual and augmented reality experiences.

Along with the fresh moniker and the strategic shifts came major changes in company leadership.

Numerous senior executives left in 2021 or announced plans to depart in the coming months. The exodus spanned the company, from its Novi cryptocurrency division to Facebook's Workplace business software unit.

Here's a list of Facebook's most notable departures in 2021, ordered by when they were announced:

Deborah Liu, formerly head of Facebook Marketplace, left in February to become CEO of Ancestry.com.

David Fischer, who was chief revenue officer, announced his departure in March. Fischer had been head of the company's advertising business and in charge of its worldwide sales organization. His exit came as Facebook geared up for privacy changes to Apple's iOS that made it more difficult for the company to deliver personalized ads.

In June, Facebook announced that Marne Levine, vice president of global partnerships and a close friend of Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, would succeed Fischer and take on the new role of chief business officer.

Kevin Weil, one of the co-founders of Facebook's Novi cryptocurrency division, left in March. He joined satellite imagery company Planet, which went public earlier this month.

Weil was central to Facebook's efforts to develop a cryptocurrency and a digital wallet. The wallet, called Novi, finally launched earlier this year, powered by technology from Coinbase. The currency, which is now run by an independent association and is called Diem, remains unreleased to the public.

Before joining Facebook's cryptocurrency team, Weil was vice president of product at Instagram and played a crucial part in the development of the Stories product, which shows users full-screen photos and videos that disappear after 24 hours.

Hugo Barra, who was vice president of virtual reality, left Facebook in May. Barra had been a big hire for Facebook, having previously served as vice president at Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi and before that as vice president of Android product management at Google.

Earlier this month, Barra announced that he had joined Covid-19 testing start-up Detect as CEO.

Carolyn Everson, served as the face of the company for major advertisers. She said in June that she'd be leaving her position as vice president of Facebook's global business group. Everson announced her departure after Levine was promoted to succeed Fischer and given the new role of chief business officer. Everson had reported to Fischer, and the two worked hand in hand.

After her departure, Everson went to Instacart in August to serve as president of the grocery delivery service company. Her time with Instacart was brief three months later she announced her departure.

Everson spent more than a decade with Facebook and was one of the company's most well-known female executives, after Sandberg.

Fidji Simo, who was head of the Facebook app for the last two years, became CEO of Instacart after leaving Facebook in July. Simo spent a decade at the company, working her way up from product marketing to become one of Facebook's most prominent female executives. She played a key role in initiatives to bring more video content to the Facebook app by way of autoplaying videos, livestreaming and the Facebook Watch video-streaming product.

Mike Verdu, who was Facebook's vice president of augmented and virtual reality content, left in July to join Netflix as a vice president of game development. Verdu departed after just two years at the company, where he worked on content for Oculus VR headsets. He had previously been a senior vice president at Electronic Arts.

Mark D'Arcy, former chief creative officer, stepped down from his role in August after more than 10 years with the company.

Samidh Chakrabarti, Facebook's former head of civic integrity, left in September. Chakrabarti founded the company's civic integrity product organization, which was responsible for ensuring its services were safe for civic engagement. That team played a crucial role in Facebook's handling of the 2020 U.S. presidential election, but it was disbanded in December 2020, just before the Jan. 6 insurrection on the U.S. capitol.

Since his departure, Chakrabarti has become one of the most outspoken former Facebook executives on Twitter, frequently commenting on topics related to the company.

Mike Schroepfer said in September that he would be leaving his job as chief technology officer in 2022. He'll transition into a part-time role of senior fellow, helping Facebook recruit and develop technical talent and assisting with the company's projects in artificial intelligence.

Schroepfer has been with Facebook since arriving as a vice president of engineering in August 2008. He's been CTO since March 2013, according to his LinkedIn profile.

He will be succeeded as CTO by Andrew “Boz” Bosworth, who is currently the head of Facebook's hardware division. The elevation of Bosworth is an indication of the growing role that hardware plays in Facebook's future, especially as it focuses on building the metaverse.

Brandon Silverman, founder and former CEO of CrowdTangle, left in October. Silverman joined Facebook in 2016 through the acquisition of CrowdTangle, an analytics tool that can be used to track popular posts on Facebook's services.

David Marcus, the head of Facebook's cryptocurrency efforts, announced in November that he'll be leaving at the end of the year.

Marcus joined the company in August 2014 after two years as president of PayPal. His initial role at Facebook was as vice president in charge of the company's Messenger service. He then launched Facebook's financial projects unit in May 2018.

Marcus spearheaded the creation of Facebook's Libra blockchain currency and the Calibra digital wallet in June 2019. The goal was for both projects to go live in 2020. Neither saw the light of day in 2020 after Facebook faced stiff backlash against its cryptocurrency ambitions from lawmakers and regulators.

Julien Codorniou, who had been the head of Facebook's Workplace business communications software, said in early December that he had joined venture firm Felix Capital.

Codorniou led Workplace since the launch of the service in 2016, joining Facebook five years earlier as a director on the platform partnerships team. In Codorniou's time running Workplace, the product increased its reach to 7 million paid subscribers.

Stan Chudnovsky, head of the company's Messenger division, announced in December that he'll be leaving in the second quarter of 2022. He joined Facebook in 2015 as head of product for the Messenger unit.

His announcement came a week after Marcus disclosed his plans to leave Facebook. They had been close colleagues at PayPal and then worked on Messenger. Chudnovsky took over Messenger from Marcus in May 2018.

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