Dropbox’s long‑time chief executive, Drew Houston, has announced that he will step down from the company’s top leadership role after an impressive 19‑year tenure steering the cloud‑storage pioneer.
Houston revealed that Ashraf Alkarmi will assume the position of co‑CEO during a brief “transition period,” after which Houston will become executive chairman. Once the transition concludes, Alkarmi will take the helm as the sole chief executive officer.
In a heartfelt memo to employees, Houston praised Alkarmi for revitalising the core business, noting that the company is now in a “stronger position than it has been in years.” He credited Alkarmi’s bold decisions and strategic bets for turning the tide and expressed full confidence in his leadership.
Today, we are officially appointing Ashraf Alkarmi as co‑CEO of Dropbox. Together with me, we will jointly steer the company, and following the transition period, I will step into the role of executive chairman while Ashraf becomes the sole CEO.
Alkarmi, now co‑CEO, also announced that former Google and Amazon executive Mike Torres will join the executive suite as Chief Product Officer on July 7. Torres previously oversaw major consumer products, including Chrome and Kindle, bringing a wealth of experience to Dropbox’s product strategy.
Alkarmi joined Dropbox in November 2024 as General Manager of the core business, drawing on his prior roles at Vimeo (where he served as CPO from 2022 to 2024) and Amazon.
Dropbox has named a new co‑chief executive officer as the company grapples with intense market pressure and fierce competition from tech giants such as Microsoft and Google, who embed cloud storage directly into their enterprise suites.
In a bid to streamline its portfolio and focus on core strengths, Dropbox has begun trimming ancillary services that have struggled to gain traction.
Notably, the firm discontinued support for its Paper mobile applications on October 9, 2025, nudging users toward the web‑based platform. It also shut down its dedicated password‑management tool, Dropbox Passwords, and encouraged subscribers to transition to third‑party solutions like 1Password.
News Source: Neowin
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