Sheryl Sandberg, Meta's chief operating officer for the past 14 years, said this week that she would leave the company. Photo / Eric Thayer, The New York Times
Mark Zuckerberg, Meta's chief executive, has restructured his company so that he no longer has a top deputy.
For more than a decade, Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg began and ended each week by meeting together.
The symbolism of the ritual was clear. It was intended to signal that Zuckerberg,the CEO of Meta, and Sandberg, the chief operating officer, were in lockstep with each other at the top of the company.
But when Sandberg, 52, said Wednesday that she would step down from Meta this fall, she crystallised an unspoken change at the tech giant: Zuckerberg no longer has any clear No. 2.
While Zuckerberg named Javier Olivan, a longtime executive, to take over Sandberg's job when she departs, the importance of the chief operating officer role has diminished at Meta, which was formerly known as Facebook. Zuckerberg, 38, instead has four executives who have equally large responsibilities and who answer to and run major decisions by him.
Zuckerberg made the structural shift because he wanted to consolidate his control over all arms of the company, three people close to him said. While Zuckerberg has always been the undisputed boss, with a majority of the company's voting shares, he shared power with Sandberg when he was a younger businessman and needed help expanding the company. But with more than 18 years of experience under his belt, he wants to exercise all of his power and be identified more clearly as Meta's sole leader, the people said.
The four top lieutenants are Andrew Bosworth, the chief technology officer; Nick Clegg, the president of global affairs; Chris Cox, the chief product officer; and Olivan, who was the head of growth, Zuckerberg said in a Facebook message about Sandberg's exit on Wednesday.
Each of the four men has major responsibilities. Clegg is the public face and ambassador for Meta, while Bosworth is pushing the company into the immersive world of the so-called metaverse. Cox oversees Meta's family of apps — Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger and Facebook — and Olivan will be in charge of analytics, infrastructure and growth.
But none of them have as much power as Sandberg used to, when she effectively ran all of the business operations while Zuckerberg focused on developing Facebook's products.
Zuckerberg alluded to the power shift Wednesday in his Facebook post. He said he didn't "plan to replace Sheryl's role in our existing structure," adding that Meta "has reached the point where it makes sense for our product and business groups to be more closely integrated, rather than having all the business and operations functions organised separately from our products."
R.A. Farrokhnia, a professor at Columbia University's Business and Engineering Schools, said the shift in management structure made sense as Meta invested in the metaverse and moved away from the social networking model that Sandberg built an advertising business for and championed for years.
"Moving in this direction requires a more decentralised — and more traditional — governance structure," Farrokhnia said. "You have multiple people coming together where the sum of the parts becomes much larger."
A spokesperson for Meta declined to comment and declined to provide interviews with executives.
For years, Zuckerberg and Sandberg had clear-cut responsibilities, which employees often referred to as the "Sandberg side" and "Mark side." Sandberg ran the business, policy and legal teams with a lot of autonomy, while Zuckerberg was responsible for the engineering and product teams.
That began changing in 2020 after Facebook dealt with scandals involving privacy, misinformation and other toxic content on the platform. Zuckerberg told his teams that he was done apologising and wanted to focus more time and attention on innovative products that the company was designing.
Since then, Zuckerberg has assumed more control over public messaging and policy decisions, which Sandberg used to handle. He also brought in hires with public policy expertise and promoted longtime executives who were loyal to his vision.
Three executives he promoted were Bosworth and Cox, who have been at the company for 16 years, and Olivan, who joined nearly 15 years ago. They were among Zuckerberg's earliest recruits, and were instrumental in building the earliest versions of Facebook.
Olivan, 44, who is known internally as Javi, joined Facebook as head of international growth and rose steadily through the ranks. He is not a household name but oversaw Facebook's rapid expansion and was closely involved with maintaining the company's technical infrastructure.
Bosworth, 40, is seen as an enthusiastic and sometimes brash cheerleader for Zuckerberg's vision. In January, he was promoted to be the next chief technology officer. He oversees the virtual and augmented reality labs, which make products such as the Quest virtual reality headsets that are at the heart of Zuckerberg's push for the metaverse. He and Zuckerberg are also close friends who vacation together.
Cox, 39, who became chief product officer in 2005, has often been described by employees as the heart of the company. He left Facebook in March 2019 but returned in June 2020, prompting speculation that Zuckerberg may have been signalling him as a successor.
During Cox's absence, some of his teams were reassigned to report directly to Zuckerberg or other executives, said two senior Meta employees who have worked with Cox since his return. They said he had not assumed the type of expansive role he once had with thousands of engineers reporting to him.
Clegg, 55, joined the company in 2018 after a career in British politics, including a stint as deputy prime minister. Sandberg hired him to take over handling Facebook's thorny political issues globally, a task that was once hers. Over time, he has become a kind of de facto head of state for the company, dealing with world governments and advocating for Meta at a regulatory level. In February, he was promoted to president of global affairs, reporting to Zuckerberg.
At Meta, insiders have long speculated over who a potential successor to Zuckerberg would be, should he ever leave. Sandberg's impending departure has now shortened that list and left no clear answers.
"Over the years, few folks other than Sheryl have emerged as a potential successor to Mark," said Katie Harbath, a director of public policy at Meta who left the company last year. "It makes sense for Mark to want options for possible successors."
She added: "It can be risky to only focus on one person."