The post Meta co-founder Dustin Moskovitz admits 13 years as CEO left him “exhausted” appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. According to the Stratechery podcast hosted by Ben Thompson, Dustin Moskovitz admitted that running a company for more than a decade nearly burned him out. The Meta co-founder said that his 13-year stretch as Asana’s CEO was “exhausting,” and that he never planned to take the top job in the first place. Dustin, who helped build Facebook in 2004 alongside Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, Chris Hughes, and Andrew McCollum, walked away from the social network in 2008 but kept a little over 8% of the company, which made him one of the youngest billionaires on the planet with a net worth around $12 billion. After leaving Facebook, Dustin co-founded Asana, a work-management software platform meant to make collaboration easier. He became its CEO almost by accident. Earlier this year, he stepped down after 13 years, becoming the company’s chairman while still holding 53% of Asana’s outstanding shares, split between Class A and Class B stock. His comments about the experience gave a rare look at what it means to be an introvert running a fast-growing tech company through years of chaos. Dustin explains why being CEO wore him down On the podcast, Dustin said, “I don’t like to manage teams, and it wasn’t my intention when we started Asana.” He said he wanted to focus on engineering instead. “Then one thing led to another and I was CEO for 13 years and I just found it quite exhausting,” said Dustin. He described being an introvert forced to “put on this face day after day,” expecting it to get easier once the company matured. It never did. “The world just kept getting more chaotic, the first Trump presidency and the pandemic and all the race stuff.” He said that being CEO eventually felt less like building a company and more like… The post Meta co-founder Dustin Moskovitz admits 13 years as CEO left him “exhausted” appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. According to the Stratechery podcast hosted by Ben Thompson, Dustin Moskovitz admitted that running a company for more than a decade nearly burned him out. The Meta co-founder said that his 13-year stretch as Asana’s CEO was “exhausting,” and that he never planned to take the top job in the first place. Dustin, who helped build Facebook in 2004 alongside Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, Chris Hughes, and Andrew McCollum, walked away from the social network in 2008 but kept a little over 8% of the company, which made him one of the youngest billionaires on the planet with a net worth around $12 billion. After leaving Facebook, Dustin co-founded Asana, a work-management software platform meant to make collaboration easier. He became its CEO almost by accident. Earlier this year, he stepped down after 13 years, becoming the company’s chairman while still holding 53% of Asana’s outstanding shares, split between Class A and Class B stock. His comments about the experience gave a rare look at what it means to be an introvert running a fast-growing tech company through years of chaos. Dustin explains why being CEO wore him down On the podcast, Dustin said, “I don’t like to manage teams, and it wasn’t my intention when we started Asana.” He said he wanted to focus on engineering instead. “Then one thing led to another and I was CEO for 13 years and I just found it quite exhausting,” said Dustin. He described being an introvert forced to “put on this face day after day,” expecting it to get easier once the company matured. It never did. “The world just kept getting more chaotic, the first Trump presidency and the pandemic and all the race stuff.” He said that being CEO eventually felt less like building a company and more like…

Meta co-founder Dustin Moskovitz admits 13 years as CEO left him “exhausted”

2025/10/26 19:28

According to the Stratechery podcast hosted by Ben Thompson, Dustin Moskovitz admitted that running a company for more than a decade nearly burned him out.

The Meta co-founder said that his 13-year stretch as Asana’s CEO was “exhausting,” and that he never planned to take the top job in the first place.

Dustin, who helped build Facebook in 2004 alongside Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, Chris Hughes, and Andrew McCollum, walked away from the social network in 2008 but kept a little over 8% of the company, which made him one of the youngest billionaires on the planet with a net worth around $12 billion.

After leaving Facebook, Dustin co-founded Asana, a work-management software platform meant to make collaboration easier. He became its CEO almost by accident.

Earlier this year, he stepped down after 13 years, becoming the company’s chairman while still holding 53% of Asana’s outstanding shares, split between Class A and Class B stock.

His comments about the experience gave a rare look at what it means to be an introvert running a fast-growing tech company through years of chaos.

Dustin explains why being CEO wore him down

On the podcast, Dustin said, “I don’t like to manage teams, and it wasn’t my intention when we started Asana.” He said he wanted to focus on engineering instead.

“Then one thing led to another and I was CEO for 13 years and I just found it quite exhausting,” said Dustin.

He described being an introvert forced to “put on this face day after day,” expecting it to get easier once the company matured. It never did. “The world just kept getting more chaotic, the first Trump presidency and the pandemic and all the race stuff.”

He said that being CEO eventually felt less like building a company and more like “reacting to problems.”

Dustin’s honesty about introversion and leadership mirrors what many high-profile figures have shared. Zuck, Bill Gates, and Warren Buffett have all described themselves as introverts who prefer quiet over crowds.

Meanwhile even as Dustin has stepped back from daily leadership, Meta continues expanding. On October 21, Meta and funds managed by Blue Owl Capital entered a joint venture to develop and own the Hyperion data-center campus.

Meta will handle construction and property management, while Blue Owl will own 80% of the venture. Meta will hold 20%. Both parties agreed to fund their share of roughly $27 billion in total development costs covering power, cooling, and connectivity systems.

As part of the deal, Meta contributed land and construction-in-progress assets tied to the project, which had been classified as held-for-sale. Blue Owl’s managed funds injected $7 billion in cash, while Meta received a one-time $3 billion distribution from the venture.

Sharpen your strategy with mentorship + daily ideas – 30 days free access to our trading program

Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/dustin-moskovitz-on-13-years-as-ceo-of-meta/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

Botanix launches stBTC to deliver Bitcoin-native yield

Botanix launches stBTC to deliver Bitcoin-native yield

The post Botanix launches stBTC to deliver Bitcoin-native yield appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Botanix Labs has launched stBTC, a liquid staking token designed to turn Bitcoin into a yield-bearing asset by redistributing network gas fees directly to users. The protocol will begin yield accrual later this week, with its Genesis Vault scheduled to open on Sept. 25, capped at 50 BTC. The initiative marks one of the first attempts to generate Bitcoin-native yield without relying on inflationary token models or centralized custodians. stBTC works by allowing users to deposit Bitcoin into Botanix’s permissionless smart contract, receiving stBTC tokens that represent their share of the staking vault. As transactions occur, 50% of Botanix network gas fees, paid in BTC, flow back to stBTC holders. Over time, the value of stBTC increases relative to BTC, enabling users to redeem their original deposit plus yield. Botanix estimates early returns could reach 20–50% annually before stabilizing around 6–8%, a level similar to Ethereum staking but fully denominated in Bitcoin. Botanix says that security audits have been completed by Spearbit and Sigma Prime, and the protocol is built on the EIP-4626 vault standard, which also underpins Ethereum-based staking products. The company’s Spiderchain architecture, operated by 16 independent entities including Galaxy, Alchemy, and Fireblocks, secures the network. If adoption grows, Botanix argues the system could make Bitcoin a productive, composable asset for decentralized finance, while reinforcing network consensus. This is a developing story. This article was generated with the assistance of AI and reviewed by editor Jeffrey Albus before publication. Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters: Source: https://blockworks.co/news/botanix-launches-stbtc
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 02:37