Instagram’s founders flee Zuckerberg’s Facebook ‘family’

Increasing level of control exerted by Zuckerberg among reasons that led to departures

Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, Instagram’s co-founders. Photograph: Christie Hemm Klok/The New York Times
Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, Instagram’s co-founders. Photograph: Christie Hemm Klok/The New York Times

In a companywide meeting earlier this year, Mark Zuckerberg was asked if Instagram could have hit one billion users if it had not been bought by Facebook. Probably not, he said. At least, not as quickly. But at a later meeting a mile or so down the road at Instagram's headquarters in Menlo Park, California – a few streets, interestingly enough, off a thoroughfare called Independence Drive – the popular photo-sharing app's co-founders, Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, had a slightly different answer to that question. Perhaps. Eventually.

We will never know who was right. But we will know soon enough what Instagram will be like without its co-founders. On Monday evening, Systrom, Instagram's chief executive, and Krieger, its chief technology officer, abruptly announced they would leave the company, though they did not give a specific date.

No one thing led to their decision to part ways with Facebook, which acquired Instagram for $1 billion (€850 million) in 2012. But little things added up over time: disagreements over tweaks to their product, staffing changes, and how over the last year Zuckerberg asserted more control over their business, which had essentially operated independently inside Facebook. Within the last few months, they had decided it was time to leave, according to a dozen current and former Instagram and Facebook employees, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak for the company.

Struggled

Their departure comes at a particularly bad time for Facebook, which over the past two years has struggled with a series of crises, from widespread Russian disinformation on its platform to a disclosure that a research company had siphoned off the information of 87 million users to threats of regulatory intervention in Washington and Brussels.

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Instagram seemed to avoid that turmoil. It was still growing fast, while Facebook's user count had stalled in the United States and Europe. It was wildly popular with younger people, while Facebook was decidedly not. And to outsiders,

Instagram’s founders appeared to be working well with Zuckerberg, unlike the founders of Facebook’s other big acquisitions, WhatsApp and Oculus. But inside the company, there was tension. Zuckerberg viewed Instagram as one of a “family of apps,” several properties under the Facebook umbrella that he thought should work more closely together, according to two people with knowledge of his thinking.

The Instagram founders thought Facebook’s increasing interest in shaping Instagram’s product direction and growth was overbearing, according to several people familiar with their thinking. They were accustomed to autonomy, and they were chafing at losing it. Facebook declined to comment on their departure.

Instagram grew faster and larger than anyone had anticipated. It created video and messaging products and released a “stories” feature that hurt the growth of its rival Snapchat, whose “Stories” product Instagram’s mimicked. In June, the photo-sharing app hit the one-billion-user mark.

Instagram's advertising business is expected to reach more than $6 billion (€5.1 billion) in revenue in 2018, according to projections from eMarketer, an industry research firm. But Zuckerberg's views on how to treat his "family of apps" – which include Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp – began to change. Zuckerberg reorganised the top of his management team earlier this year, installing Adam Mosseri as vice president of product at Instagram. Though Mosseri is liked by Systrom and Krieger, many employees viewed Mosseri's promotion as a sign of Zuckerberg installing a trusted lieutenant in the photo-sharing organisation because of his close relationship to Zuckerberg and other top Facebook executives.

Small tweaks

Zuckerberg also put a layer of management between himself and Instagram's co-founders, asking Systrom and Krieger to report to Chris Cox, Facebook's chief product officer. As Instagram kept on growing, Zuckerberg believed there were ways it should help Facebook grow and improve Facebook's "user engagement".

That included small tweaks, like automatically sharing Instagram “Stories” videos to Facebook without clear signs indicating the videos were taken on Instagram. Earlier this year, Facebook also removed a shortcut link to Instagram from its “bookmarks” menu inside the Facebook app, a small but significant source of traffic that flowed from Facebook to Instagram. As the relationship began to sour, Systrom and Krieger over the last few months openly disagreed with their Facebook counterparts in meetings. The relationship was still courteous. But employees were surprised when Krieger, an affable, widely liked figure inside the company, voiced his clear dissent against Facebook leadership in meetings and on company message boards.

Inside Instagram, many believed Mosseri, who is likely to be its next chief executive, was installed in the anticipation that the relationship between the two sides could fall apart. As for Systrom and Krieger, they have remained effusive in their public statements and thanks to Zuckerberg and other Facebook executives for supporting them. And their departure, despite its suddenness, does require some perspective.

Both Instagram founders stayed on for six years after being acquired - much longer than entrepreneurs usually do after selling their company and long after they had received their full payout in stock. They said they planned to take time off before embarking on another venture together.

– The New York Times News Service