John Legere is stepping down as CEO of T-Mobile, succeeded by deputy Mike Sievert on May 1

John Legere is stepping down as CEO of T-Mobile, succeeded by deputy Mike Sievert on May 1

5 years ago
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https://techcrunch.com/2019/11/18/john-legere-is-stepping-down-as-ceo-of-t-mobile-succeeded-by-deputy-mike-sievert-on-may-1/

He’s reportedly not going to take over WeWork, but John Legere is definitely on his way out of the CEO role at T-Mobile, the carrier that is currently merging with SoftBank-controlled Sprint. Today the carrier and Legere confirmed that Mike Sievert — currently T-Mobile’s COO — will succeed Legere as CEO on May 1 of 2020. Legere will stay on the board.

Neither Legere nor T-Mobile commented on what his next move will be, and specifically if this will pave the way for him to take over the top job at WeWork. There had been reports that Legere — something of a turnaround specialist — was being lined up for the job at the very troubled office-space startup, which had to shelve its IPO earlier this year after showing poor financials amid questionable management that not only led to the departure of its founder Adam Neumann as CEO, but a strong devaluation of the company that resulted in SoftBank, as a major creditor, taking control.

John Legere is stepping down as CEO of T-Mobile, succeeded by deputy Mike Sievert on May 1

Nov 18, 2019, 3:24pm UTC
https://techcrunch.com/2019/11/18/john-legere-is-stepping-down-as-ceo-of-t-mobile-succeeded-by-deputy-mike-sievert-on-may-1/ > He’s reportedly not going to take over WeWork, but John Legere is definitely on his way out of the CEO role at T-Mobile, the carrier that is currently merging with SoftBank-controlled Sprint. Today the carrier and Legere confirmed that Mike Sievert — currently T-Mobile’s COO — will succeed Legere as CEO on May 1 of 2020. Legere will stay on the board. > Neither Legere nor T-Mobile commented on what his next move will be, and specifically if this will pave the way for him to take over the top job at WeWork. There had been reports that Legere — something of a turnaround specialist — was being lined up for the job at the very troubled office-space startup, which had to shelve its IPO earlier this year after showing poor financials amid questionable management that not only led to the departure of its founder Adam Neumann as CEO, but a strong devaluation of the company that resulted in SoftBank, as a major creditor, taking control.