News The Walt Disney Company Board of Directors Extends Robert A. Iger’s Contract as CEO Through 2026

DCBaker

Premium Member
Original Poster
Latest update from Bloomberg on the Board of Director's search for a successor to Bob Iger.

Walt Disney Co.’s board is focusing on four divisional heads as part of a formal search for an eventual successor to Chief Executive Officer Bob Iger, people with knowledge of the matter said.

The four are TV chief Dana Walden, ESPN’s Jimmy Pitaro, theme-parks boss Josh D’Amaro and Alan Bergman, who heads the film business, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private conversations.

As part of the process, Disney may appoint a No. 2 executive — a chief operating officer or president — to serve for a time before Iger steps down, according to the people. His contract runs through the end of 2026, and no decision on a successor is expected this year, the people said.

Iger is spending time with all of the internal candidates to help them understand how he approaches the job and give them exposure to business units they’re not familiar with, according to the people.

All of this is happening under the glare of dissident shareholders who are seeking seeking board seats at Disney’s April 3 annual meeting. Trian Fund Management’s Nelson Peltz, in particular, has been critical of the company’s succession planning, saying he and Jay Rasulo, Disney’s former chief financial officer, should join the board to invigorate the search.

Disney has outlined some of its succession planning in regulatory filings. A board committee formed last year met six times in fiscal 2023, working with a search firm, reviewing internal and external candidates, and conducting interviews.
Chairman Mark Parker, who oversaw a successful transition as CEO of Nike Inc., is leading the effort, along with three other board members: Morgan Stanley Chairman James Gorman, General Motors Co. CEO Mary Barra and Lululemon Athletica Inc. CEO Calvin McDonald.

The world’s largest entertainment company has struggled with succession in the past. Iger passed the baton to parks chief Bob Chapek in February 2020, only to return in November 2022 amid streaming TV losses and a public feud between the company and Florida politicians.

In 2015, the company named then-parks head Tom Staggs as chief operating officer, positioning him as possible successor to Iger. But Staggs stepped down a year later, and Iger extended his tenure for another four years.

Walden is seen as a brilliant creative executive with strong talent relationships, but she is still learning the streaming business and has little experience in parks. D’Amaro has plenty of savvy with parks and almost no background in film and TV. Pitaro is leading the charge into streaming for ESPN, the largest sports media company in the world, but has a smaller portfolio than most of his peers. Bergman has spent much of his career at the film studio, with his earlier years in financial roles.

Should Disney go outside the company for its new leader, it would be the first time since Michael Eisner got the job in 1984. Both Chapek and Iger were appointed from within.

 

Jrb1979

Well-Known Member

NotCalledBob

Well-Known Member
Latest update from Bloomberg on the Board of Director's search for a successor to Bob Iger.




If they've narrowed it down to a divisional head, they must have a clear favorite by now internally. It's not like Iger and the board don't know them well enough.

I'd say Walden is by far the most likely option.

Pitaro by far the least likely option.

And D'Amaro and Bergman somewhere in between.
 

el_super

Well-Known Member
Latest update from Bloomberg on the Board of Director's search for a successor to Bob Iger.

Even understanding that there are differences between Chapek and D'Amaro, I have a hard time believing that investors would respond positively to having a parks head come in and helm the entire company again.

Also at this point, with a generally favorable opinion on how the parks are running under D'Amaro, there may be desire to keep him where he is and not upset the apple cart.
 

MisterPenguin

President of Animal Kingdom
Premium Member
I think the best option is to launch a new Disney+ show where they compete in various tasks and the audience can vote them off.

Dancing with Disney's Idol Got Talent. Top masked CEO edition.
"Jimmy, you did well in the talent show as you put your resumé to the tune of Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.

You have great skill in the world of sports entertainment, but you know nothing of parks or the Hollywood game.


<loud dramatic orchestra lick with spotlights darting about>​

I'm sorry to say: You are the weakest link. Take your resumé and go."
 

SamusAranX

Well-Known Member
"Jimmy, you did well in the talent show as you put your resumé to the tune of Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.

You have great skill in the world of sports entertainment, but you know nothing of parks or the Hollywood game.


<loud dramatic orchestra lick with spotlights darting about>​

I'm sorry to say: You are the weakest link. Take your resumé and go."
I would start my Disney + subscription back up for this
 

MR.Dis

Well-Known Member
If they've narrowed it down to a divisional head, they must have a clear favorite by now internally. It's not like Iger and the board don't know them well enough.

I'd say Walden is by far the most likely option.

Pitaro by far the least likely option.

And D'Amaro and Bergman somewhere in between.
Poor Walden, it is the kiss of death to be the favorite. How long before Iger oh so gently starts to undercut and stick his very sharp long knives in her back.
 

Doberge

True Bayou Magic
Premium Member
Jimmy Pitaro was my dark horse candidate after listening to a niche podcast sports media podcast interview (if wanting to hear, look up the Sports Media Podcast with Richard Deitsch, I believe the interview was last summer) but I'm still surprised to see his name. I liked his leadership style and think he's done well continuing to pivot ESPN getting into sports betting and eventually standalone services away from cable. He at least has experience in other Disney divisions, unlike the other three. He's navigated niche media politics needing to work with multiple billion dollar leagues and conferences. Walden, Bergman, and D'Amaro also have pretty niche experiences as well.

I'm currently ranking as Walden, Pitaro, Bergman, D'Amaro. Recency bias may hurt Bergman as films have really struggled and that side seems pretty stuck and in need of new blood. Bergman in running and not being selected may push a separation that side may need. D'Amaro hasn't ripened yet. I think Walden has done well but I'm curious what joining a Biden export committee will do for her candidacy. It's a position with many other CEOs and seems like something of a test for her. CEOs of FedEx, 3M, Citi, CVS, Walgreens Boots, Qualcomm, and then other c-suite folks from Ford, United Airlines, and Comcast. And they didn't put D'Amaro or Bergman on it, they put Walden.
 

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom