- Fidji Simo, OpenAI’s No. 2 executive and chief business officer, will not return from her extended medical leave and plans to step down from her full-time role; she communicated the decision to staff in a note Thursday, saying her medical condition had worsened and her road to recovery would be longer than anticipated — she will transition to a part-time advisory role at the company.
- Simo’s departure leaves a significant leadership gap at OpenAI at a particularly consequential moment: the company is navigating its conversion from a nonprofit to a for-profit entity and preparing for what is expected to be one of the largest technology IPOs in history, with its valuation last pegged in private markets at more than $300 billion.
- The exit continues a pattern of senior executive turnover at OpenAI — the company has seen departures across research, safety, and business leadership over the past two years, including co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, safety team leaders, and several other high-profile executives whose exits have raised questions about internal culture and alignment with the company’s original mission.
- Simo, formerly a senior executive at Meta where she led the Facebook app, joined OpenAI in 2023 to lead its commercial operations and was widely seen as a critical figure in translating OpenAI’s technical capabilities into enterprise revenue — her departure comes as the company faces intensifying competition from Anthropic, Google DeepMind, and Meta’s own AI division in the enterprise AI market.
What Happened?
Fidji Simo, OpenAI’s highest-ranking business executive, informed staff Thursday that she would not return from medical leave. Her condition, which she did not specify publicly, has worsened to the point where a full return is not feasible on any near-term timeline. She will become a part-time adviser to the company. The announcement was reported by the Wall Street Journal.
Why It Matters?
OpenAI is at an inflection point. Its for-profit conversion — which required resolving concerns from the California and Delaware attorneys general about whether the nonprofit’s charitable assets were being fairly valued — is complete or nearing completion. An IPO is widely expected, and the company needs stable business leadership to execute the roadmap it will present to public market investors. Simo was specifically recruited to build the enterprise sales infrastructure and partnership network that OpenAI needs to justify its valuation. Finding a replacement with comparable experience in enterprise software commercialization, while simultaneously managing an IPO process, is a non-trivial executive search challenge.
What’s Next?
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman will need to quickly identify an interim or permanent successor with enterprise commercialization credibility. The company’s enterprise pipeline — which includes major deployments at Microsoft, financial services firms, and healthcare companies — needs continuity of leadership. Investors will also watch whether Simo’s departure triggers any renegotiation of commercial terms with key partners or affects the company’s IPO timeline. For the broader AI industry, the revolving door of senior talent at OpenAI raises a recurring question about whether the company’s unusual governance structure and internal culture make it harder to retain executives who come from conventional corporate backgrounds.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













