- On March 14, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the departure of two key executives: chief product officer Chris Cox and head of WhatsApp Chris Daniels.
- Cox and Daniels join a long list of Facebook employees who have left the company.
- We took a look at where 14 of the most important Facebook employees throughout the company’s history are now.
On March 14, CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the departure of Chris Cox, chief product officer and longtime employee of Facebook.
Cox joined the team in 2005, one year after Facebook’s inception. Cox, along with head of WhatsApp Chris Daniels, now join the ranks of other execs formerly employed at Facebook. Some, like Cox, worked with Zuckerberg for over a decade, while others stayed only a few years.
We took a look at these employees who impacted the course of the company’s development, from some of its earliest founding members to its most recent big names. Alongside Cox and Daniels, the list includes Zuckerberg’s Harvard roommates Dustin Moskovitz and Chris Hughes. The list also includes employees still working for the company, such augmented and virtual-reality vice president Andrew Bosworth and chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg.
Keep reading for a look at some of Facebook's most important employees.
Mark Zuckerberg
Years employed at Facebook: 2004-present
Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook during his sophomore year at Harvard University in 2004. Still the company's reigning CEO, Zuckerberg has seen many milestones, from the company's first appearance on the New York Stock Exchange to its acquisition of Instagram and WhatsApp in 2012 and 2014 respectively.
More recently, Zuckerberg and Facebook have come under fire for scandals around the 2016 presidential election and Cambridge Analytica's acquisition of Facebook users' personal data. Zuckerberg appeared before Congress in April of 2018.
Source: Business Insider
Chris Cox
Years employed at Facebook: 2005-2019
Chris Cox joined Facebook in 2005 and was one of the company's earliest employees. The chief technology officer built several of the company's core products, including the News Feed. Cox worked with Zuckerberg for 13 years.
News of his departure broke on March 14 and marks the most significant departure from the company in years.
Source: Business Insider, The New York Times
Adam D'Angelo
Years employed at Facebook: 2004-2008
Adam D'Angelo joined Facebook in 2004, and worked at the company for five years as its chief technology officer. He also served as the vice president of engineering, and initially headed the Facebook Platform team building newsfeed and ad targeting infrastructure.
D'Angelo left the company in 2008 to found question-and-answer site Quora alongside another former Facebook employee, Charlie Cheever.
Source: Business Insider, Berggruen Institute, Forbes
Chamath Palihapitiya
Years employed at Facebook: 2007-2011
Palihapitiya joined Facebook in 2007, and worked with the company for four years. While at Facebook, Palihapitiya worked as the vice president for user growth.
Upon leaving the company in 2011, Palihapitiya founded his venture fund, Social Capital. He's also now the co-owner of the Golden State Warriors.
Source: Washington Post, Business Insider
Chris Hughes
Years employed at Facebook: 2004-2007
One of Mark Zuckerberg's roommates and original founders of Facebook, Chris Hughes worked at the company during its early stages. Hughes became Facebook's spokesperson, and helped get its first press coverage. After graduating from Harvard, he took an official position as the head of the product team at the new Palo Alto headquarters.
After just three years with the company, Hughes transferred his social skills to build the internet presence for President Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign, before heading the New Republic for four years. Hughes sold the publication in 2016. He published his book titled "Fair Shot" last year.
Source: Forbes, Fast Company, Business Insider
Dustin Moskovitz
Years employed at Facebook: 2004-2008
Moskovitz and Zuckerberg were the two founding members to drop out of school and immediately move to Palo Alto, where they established the company's headquarters. During his time at the company, Moskovitz worked as both chief technology officer and vice president of engineering.
After leaving Facebook, he went on to found task management company Asana alongside former Facebook colleague Justin Rosenstein. The Asana CEO also runs philanthropic foundation Good Ventures with his wife.
Source: Bloomberg, Business Insider, Wealth-X, Forbes
Dave Morin
Years employed at Facebook: 2006-2010
A former senior platform manager at Facebook, Morin is credited with launching Facebook Connect, allowing users to see friends' activities on other sites across the web.
After his time on Zuckerberg's team, Morin co-founded the now-extinct social media network Path. He also co-founded the fund Slow Ventures with two former Facebook employees.
Source: New York Times, Forbes, TechCrunch, TechCrunch
Matt Cohler
Years employed at Facebook: 2004-2008
Matt Cohler is notably one of Facebook's first five employees after co-founders Mark Zuckerberg and Dustin Moskovitz moved the company to Silicon Valley. While at Facebook, Cohler headed product development organizations and was considered a special advisor of Zuckerberg's. His official title at the company was vice president of product management.
He left to become a partner of Benchmark Capital. Cohler currently sits on the boards of several key companies, such as Uber, Tinder, and Instagram.
Source: Bloomberg, Business Insider, Wall Street Journal
Sheryl Sandberg
Years employed at Facebook: 2008-present
Previously an executive at Google, Sheryl Sanberg joined Facebook in 2008 as the company's chief operating officer, a title she still holds today. She was later elected to the company's board of directors in 2012. Sandberg testified before the Senate Intelligence Committee in September 2018 following Facebook's data breaches.
Source: Wall Street Journal, New Yorker, Business Insider, CNBC
Gideon Yu
Years employed at Facebook: 2007-2009
Yu joined Zuckerberg's team in 2007 after working at YouTube, Sequoia Capital, and Yahoo. As Facebook's chief financial officer, Yu successfully oversaw Microsoft's $240 million deal to invest in the company.
Despite his successful past in tech, Yu is no longer an executive. Instead, he co-owns the San Francisco 49ers and formerly served as the team's president.
Source: Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Stanford, 49ers, TechCrunch
Sean Parker
Years employed at Facebook: 2004-2005
Having previously worked on the music-sharing site Napster, Parker joined Facebook as the company's first president when the company was just five months old. As president, Parker successfully landed Zuckerberg his first investor, billionaire co-founder of PayPal, Peter Thiel. He is also responsible for bringing aboard ad salesman Kevin Colleran, who became the company's director of sales.
Today, Parker is a venture capital investor and runs his Parker Foundation.
Source: Variety, Business Insider, Forbes, Business Insider
Sam Lessin
Years employed at Facebook: 2010-2014
Lessin is a co-founder of the file-sharing service Drop.io, which was acquired by Facebook in 2010. Following this deal, Lessin joined Facebook's product management team as its vice president.
Lessin announced he would be leaving Facebook in 2014, and has since founded Fin, an artificial intelligence company.
Source: Business Insider, Business Insider, TechCrunch, TechCrunch
Kevin Colleran
Years employed at Facebook: 2005-2011
As one of the first 10 employees at Zuckerberg's company, Kevin Colleran is credited with signing Facebook's first major advertisers when he joined the company in 2005 as an ad sales executive. He also created the social network's first branded pages for corporations, and was named director of national sales.
Since leaving Facebook in 2011, his more recent ventures include writing a column for the Wall Street Journal and founding Slow Ventures fund with another Facebook veteran, Dave Morin.
Source: Bloomberg, Business Insider
Andrew Bosworth
Years employed at Facebook: 2006-present
Known as "The Boz," Andrew Bosworth is known for building Facebook's Newsfeed platform. Prior to Bosworth's work, Facebook users had to jump from friend's page to friend's page, instead of the streamlined format used today.
Bosworth still serves as Facebook's vice president of AR and VR (augmented and virtual reality).
Source: Business Insider, Wired