San Francisco Chronicle

Magic Leap hires top Microsoft exec as CEO

- By Erin Griffith and Karen Weise Erin Griffith and Karen Weise are New York Times writers.

Magic Leap has hired Peggy Johnson, a top executive at Microsoft, to be its CEO, as the troubled augmented reality headset startup shifts its focus from consumers to businesses.

Johnson, who starts at Magic Leap in August, is joining at a critical time for the once vaunted startup. While Magic Leap had caused excitement with a virtual reality headset intended to show people the technology’s abilities, the product arrived after many delays to lukewarm reviews, and sales fell short of expectatio­ns.

In December, Magic Leap announced plans to focus on selling technology to businesses rather than consumers, aligning more closely with Johnson’s experience at Microsoft.

Johnson, 58, said last week that she had contacted Rony Abovitz, Magic Leap’s founder and CEO, who had announced in May that he would step down. She said she saw opportunit­ies in Magic Leap’s “spatial” technology, which projects digital images into the real world.

Johnson, a former executive at Qualcomm who joined Microsoft six years ago, compared the spatial technology’s promise to the early days of cellular technology and cloud computing.

“It just feels to me that it’s at that same moment in time,” she said.

The opportunit­y is even bigger during the coronaviru­s pandemic, with people working remotely and traveling less, she said, adding that possible uses for the technology include job training, in the medical field and industrial automation.

Johnson is the latest experience­d female or executive of color brought in to turn around a struggling company, a phenomenon that researcher­s have called the “glass cliff.” Last year, Linda Kozlowski, an executive at Etsy and Evernote, took over the flagging meal kit service Blue Apron. In 2018, Jill Soltau, former head of JoAnn Stores, was brought in to turn around J.C. Penney Co.

Magic Leap, which Abovitz founded in Florida in 2010, has amassed nearly $3.5 billion in venture funding from investors including Google, Alibaba, Fidelity and Andreessen Horowitz, valuing it at $6.4 billion, according to PitchBook.

But after its headset sales flopped, it changed course. In April, Magic Leap laid off roughly 600 of its 1,900 workers. Since then, the company has secured an additional $375 million in funding, a spokeswoma­n said.

Johnson’s departure means Microsoft is losing one of the three female executives who were part of CEO Satya Nadella’s senior leadership team of 16.

Nadella had recruited Johnson from Qualcomm after he became CEO in 2014. At Microsoft, Johnson ran business developmen­t, brokering major partnershi­ps and shepherdin­g its acquisitio­ns, including the 2016 purchase of LinkedIn for $26.2 billion.

In 2016, she helped start a venture capital fund at Microsoft, now known as M12, to directly invest in startups, largely those working in cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce.

Johnson said she had long aspired to be a CEO.

“I chose this,” she said. “It really says something that, at this point in time, I would leave Microsoft to go to this space, because Microsoft is doing quite well.”

 ?? Jeenah Moon / New York Times ?? Peggy Johnson is leaving Microsoft to become CEO at struggling augmented reality startup Magic Leap.
Jeenah Moon / New York Times Peggy Johnson is leaving Microsoft to become CEO at struggling augmented reality startup Magic Leap.

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