Peloton hires former Twitter executive Dalana Brand to be chief people officer

Peloton hires former Twitter executive Dalana Brand to be chief people officer


Peloton Rowing Machine

Courtesy: Peloton

Peloton said Wednesday it hired former Twitter executive Dalana Brand to be its new chief people officer, as the fitness company continues its transformation and attempts to return to profitability. 

The hire – the second executive appointment to come from Twitter in recent weeks – completes the leadership team CEO Barry McCarthy has been building since he took over the company from founder John Foley last February, he said in a statement. 

“Talent density has been a top priority for me at Peloton. Dalana’s addition is the culmination of that strategy, rounding out and completing the leadership team,” McCarthy said. “As we continue Peloton’s transformation and pivot to growth, her vision and leadership will be critical to our success.”

Brand, who previously served as the chief people and diversity officer at Twitter, resigned in November days after Elon Musk bought the social media giant, took it private and installed himself as its CEO, throwing the company into turmoil.

She follows behind Leslie Berland, the former chief marketing officer of Twitter, who took the same job at Peloton in mid-January. She also left the social media company soon after Musk took over. 

Brand will serve an important role at Peloton as the company seeks to retain talent, attract new hires and boost morale after McCarthy issued in a new era of fiscal rigor at the once-profitable company and laid off more than half of its staff. 

Current and former employees previously told CNBC the transition has been difficult at times and morale has fluctuated. 

Peloton has been looking to fill the role since October after its former chief people officer, Shari Eaton, left the company as a series of other executives vacated their posts, including co-founder and former chief legal officer Hisao Kushi and former marketing head Dara Treseder.

“I’ve made a career out of fostering inclusive employee experiences and leading with transparency and accountability,” Brand said in a statement. “I’m thrilled to join the team at Peloton as the company continues striving to make fitness accessible for all.” 

In a news release, Peloton touted Brand’s “strong reputation for organizational transformation” across multiple industries. While at Twitter, she led the company’s global workforce and helped speed up its processes to make the workplace more inclusive. 

She previously served as vice president of total rewards for Electronic Arts and held senior leadership roles at Whirlpool Corporation. 

Brand starts the new job on March 13 and will report to McCarthy. 



Source

This fintech unicorn just launched an AI agent to handle billions of dollars in CRE lending
Business

This fintech unicorn just launched an AI agent to handle billions of dollars in CRE lending

Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwards Courtesy of Built Technologies A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Property Play newsletter with Diana Olick. Property Play covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, from individuals to venture capitalists, private equity funds, family offices, institutional investors and large public companies. Sign up to receive […]

Read More
FAA announces flight reductions at 40 airports. Here’s what travelers need to know
Business

FAA announces flight reductions at 40 airports. Here’s what travelers need to know

A Republic Airways plane takes off near the air traffic control tower at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) in Arlington, Virginia, US, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. Samuel Corum | Bloomberg | Getty Images Airlines rushed to provide travelers updates after the Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday that it would reduce flights across 40 […]

Read More
Target’s sloppier stores are wearing on shoppers, and its turnaround could hinge on cleaning them up
Business

Target’s sloppier stores are wearing on shoppers, and its turnaround could hinge on cleaning them up

The Target bullseye logo is seen on the outside of its store at the Lycoming Crossing Shopping Center. Paul Weaver | Lightrocket | Getty Images Customers used to hold up Target as an example of how to run large, yet sparkling stores. Yet in recent years, shopper complaints about sloppier aisles, longer checkout lines, locked-up […]

Read More