Pinterest Inc said long-time Chief Executive Officer Ben Silbermann would step down, handing over the reins of the social media platform to Google commerce executive Bill Ready.
In a major leadership shakeup, Pinterest has announced that its CEO is stepping down, making way for a former Google executive to take the helm. The move signals a bold pivot toward e-commerce as the social media platform looks to evolve from an inspiration hub to a shopping powerhouse.
The news sent the company’s shares 9% higher in extended trading on Tuesday and underscored a shift in focus at Pinterest to e-commerce initiatives from its advertising-based business model.
In Ready, 42, the company gets an executive who for the past two years ran commerce and payment operations at the Alphabet Inc-owned search giant. Ready has also held senior leadership roles at PayPal.
His appointment brings to an end Silbermann’s 12-year tenure as CEO, which began when he co-founded the company in 2010. Pinterest has grown rapidly since then and now has more than 430 million monthly active users.
Silbermann, 39, will take up the newly created role of executive chairman and keep his board seat, while Ready will also join the board, the company said.
Ready will receive an annual salary of $400,000 and be eligible for a stock option award to buy about 8.6 million Class A shares.
“In our next chapter, we are focused on helping Pinners buy, try and act on all the great ideas they see,” Silbermann said.
“Bill is a great leader for this transition,” he added.
Industry analysts say Pinterest could emerge as a unique player in the social commerce space, combining user intent, product discovery, and now—under new leadership—transactional capability.

