Business Standard

Facebook’s Sandberg, Twitter’s Dorsey to Depart Disney Board

- CHRISTOPHE­R PALMERI 13 January

Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg and Twitter’s Jack Dorsey are stepping down from Walt Disney’s board as the increasing competitio­n between media and technology companies creates new conflicts.

Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, and Dorsey, Twitter’s chief executive officer, aren’t running for re- election at the annual meeting scheduled for March 8, according to a Disney filing. Orin Smith, the 75-yearold lead independen­t director, and Robert Matschulla­t, 70, also won’t stand for reelection because of term and age limits for board members.

“Given our evolving business and the businesses Sandberg and Dorsey are in, it has become increasing­ly difficult for them to avoid conflicts relating to board matters,” Disney said in a statement.

The changes will leave the Disney board with one fewer director than last year as the company pursues its proposed $52.4 billion acquisitio­n of most of 21st Century Fox. As the entertainm­ent industry continues to consolidat­e and the worlds of Silicon Valley and Hollywood merge, Disney’s board has at times found itself having to deal with conflicts of interest.

Two years ago Disney pursued an acquisitio­n of Twitter, Dorsey’s company. Twitter and Facebook have also bid on and won the rights to stream live sporting events, a bedrock business for Disney and its ESPN network.

Facebook has escalated efforts around video programmin­g, a lucrative growth area for the company’s advertisin­g business, which brought in $10.1 billion last year. Twitter, too, has made more forays into video. Dorsey’s firm announced video streaming partnershi­ps in May with 16 media companies, including some Disney competitor­s. Twitter also has a partnershi­p with Bloomberg.

Disney maintained ties to the tech world through its board after the death of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, once the company’s largest shareholde­r. The entertainm­ent giant named two members to its board in December, tapping CEOs from the software and biotech industries.

Safra Catz, co- CEO of software giant Oracle, and Francis Desouza, head of Illumina, will join the board on February 1. General Motors CEO Mary Barra became a Disney director in August.

Disney’s board extended CEO Bob Iger’s contract last month for yet another two years, in connection with the proposed Fox acquisitio­n. The 66-year-old is now scheduled to leave the company in 2021, the fourth time the company postponed his planned retirement date.

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