Instacart names Chris Rogers as CEO after Fidji Simo’s exit for OpenAI

Instacart names Chris Rogers as CEO after Fidji Simo’s exit for OpenAI


Instacart celebrates their IPO at the Nasdaq on Sept. 19th, 2023.

Courtesy: Nasdaq

Instacart on Wednesday appointed business chief Chris Rogers as its new CEO, less than a month after OpenAI announced CEO Fidji Simo as its new head of applications.

Shares were last down about 2% in premarket trading.

Rogers, who joined Instacart in 2019, will start Aug. 15 and join the board of directors. Simo will retain her chair position to “smooth the transition,” the company said.

“Over the last four years, we’ve transformed Instacart into a growing, profitable, leading technology platform that’s helping reshape the grocery industry,” Simo said in a release. “We’re building a generational company at the intersection of technology and food, and Chris is the right leader for our next chapter.”

OpenAI announced this month that it had recruited Simo to lead its applications team, reporting directly to CEO Sam Altman. At the time, Altman said in a post that Simo would “focus on enabling our ‘traditional’ company functions to scale as we enter a next phase of growth.”

She joined the artificial intelligence startup’s board last year.

Simo helped take the grocery delivery company public in 2023, after it ballooned in popularity as consumers sheltered at home during the depths of the pandemic.

At the time, Instacart was the first major venture-backed tech IPO since the end of 2021. She also made CNBC’s 2024 Changemakers list.

“There were a lot of questions about whether Instacart would be just another pandemic fad,” Simo told CNBC at the time. “And we have now proven that we not only kept the Covid gains, but grew on top of the Covid gains and grew sustainably and profitably,  which is really important.”

Prior to joining Instacart, Rogers spent 11 years at Apple working in a variety of roles, including managing director for the company’s Canada division. He started his career at the delivery company as vice president of global retail, later transitioning into the chief business officer role.

Rogers began his professional career at Procter & Gamble and graduated in 2001 from Canada’s Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, with a bachelor’s degree in business administration.

“We have a world-class team, deep partnerships, leading technology, and a bold vision for the future, and I’m honored to step in and lead Instacart’s next chapter,” he said.



Source

Cramer says look to these 4 stocks to go with your high-flying tech names
Technology

Cramer says look to these 4 stocks to go with your high-flying tech names

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Thursday investors should look beyond the market’s hottest trades and start hunting for opportunities in areas that have already been beaten down. “I want to praise the other parts of the market … that have been marked down already, which makes them less vulnerable,” the “Mad Money” host said. With the […]

Read More
Intel’s stock soars 16% as results top estimates, with chipmaker showing signs of growth
Technology

Intel’s stock soars 16% as results top estimates, with chipmaker showing signs of growth

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan holds a wafer of CPU tiles for the Intel Core Ultra series 3, code-named Panther Lake, outside the Intel Ocotillo campus in Chandler, Arizona. Courtesy: Intel Intel reported first-quarter earnings Thursday that blew past Wall Street’s expectations, as the struggling chipmaker shows signs of a revival. Shares of the U.S. chipmaker […]

Read More
Meta will cut 10% of workforce as company pushes deeper into AI
Technology

Meta will cut 10% of workforce as company pushes deeper into AI

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg leaves the Federal Courthouse in downtown Los Angeles after defending the company in a landmark social media addiction trial in Los Angeles, United States, on February 19, 2026. Jon Putman | Anadolu | Getty Images Meta plans to lay off 10% of its workforce, equaling about 8,000 jobs, as it continues […]

Read More