Intel’s business partners are apparently not happy with the departure of former CEO Pat Gelsinger, who claims that his exit is a massive concern for the future of Intel’s business.
Intel’s CEO Retirement Hasn’t Aligned With “Traditional Norms,” As His Decision Looks To Be A “Forced One”
The retirement of Pat Gelsinger isn’t a simple case since it involves dynamics that revolve around Intel’s plans and how the firm decides to move ahead. Based on a report by Bloomberg, Intel’s former CEO was given the option of either getting fired by the board of directors or resigning from his position, which revealed that Team Blue was not in a position to be led by Gelsinger further on. However, Intel’s channel partners claim that Gelsinger’s exit shows that there was “doubt” about his strategy.
Obviously this is not good news, because Pat was the strategy.
[While talking about the co-CEO Michelle Johnston Holthaus]Michelle is a seasoned leader. I’ve known her for a long time, so I think she’s a good steward of the Intel business, [and] she’s a good choice to co-lead the company. But obviously [Gelsinger’s sudden exit] is someone saying there’s doubt in the previous strategy.
– Erik Stromquist, Chairman of Beaverton (Chrome Device Manufacturer) via CRN
Gelsinger has played a pivotal role in reshaping Intel’s foundry business to the point where it competes with mainstream competitors in “node technology.” Given the optimism Intel’s former CEO was heading with, it was certain that the industry would witness a “business turnover,” whether through the debut of IFS’s 18A process or even through the progress the company was making in the consumer CPU segment.
An “unnamed” US Intel distribution partner claims that Gelsinger’s departure doesn’t seem to be a “voluntary” one, saying that there was no mention of a transition period or the usual formalities, and instead, Gelsinger said that he is stepping down immediately. This certainly hints that Intel’s former CEO wasn’t very happy with the move and was pressured to make such a decision, whether by the board of directors or the state of Intel’s business.
Usually, when somebody retires from Intel, there’s a much longer process,” said the distribution executive, who asked not to be named to speak frankly.
They announce that they’re retiring. They usually stay on for a transition period and do all those kinds of things in a very long and drawn-out period, not, ‘I’m retiring, and today’s my last day.
– Intel US distribution partner via CRN
There are several other narratives for this decision as well, with some experts claiming that this move made Gelsinger a “scapegoat” for Intel, and he wasn’t being credited rightly for the progress the firm achieved within the four years of his “CEO” tenure. Some say that Intel’s “sluggish” AI performance, followed by the lost dominance in the CPU workstation markets, were the primary catalysts behind this decision, so things weren’t looking good for Gelsinger either way.
Now that Intel lost confidence in Gelsinger’s “long-term strategy,” it will be interesting to see how the firm proceeds in the future, given that now, it won’t have the option of blaming the company’s administration if the sluggish business momentum continues.
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