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Tag: Match Group

  • Your competition for the CEO role might be on your board | Fortune

    Appointing board directors as CEOs was once a “break glass in case of emergency” strategy reserved for scandal, illness, or sudden resignation. While it remains a minority path compared with traditional internal promotions, it is no longer an anomaly.

    New data from Spencer Stuart highlights the shift. Of the 168 new S&P 1500 chief executives appointed in 2025, the highest annual total since 2010, 19 were drawn from their own company boards, the most since 2020. Spencer Stuart classifies directors as outsiders because they lack day-to-day operating responsibility. Even so, more boards are turning to them.

    The increase comes amid elevated churn. CEO departures in the S&P 500 reached roughly 13% in 2025, according to governance trackers, leaving boards to manage performance pressure and succession gaps simultaneously. Internal candidates, such as chief operating officers and division heads, still account for the majority of appointments. But in moments of strategic reset, boards sometimes look beyond executives associated with the existing plan. Meanwhile, several high-profile external hires have reinforced the risks of expensive searches that promise reinvention but deliver disruption.

    The insider-outsider advantage

    Against that backdrop, directors offer what board advisers describe as an insider-outsider balance. They understand the company’s strategy, capital allocation framework, and risk profile. Yet they are not embedded in a single operating silo. That distance can make it easier to reset priorities without discarding the broader plan.

    Recent moves show how the model is playing out across sectors. At Constellation Brands, Nicholas Fink was named chief executive in February 2026 after serving on the board since 2021. Match Group elevated director Spencer Rascoff to chief executive in 2025 to accelerate product and artificial intelligence initiatives.

    Other examples reinforce the pattern. Bed Bath & Beyond appointed Marcus Lemonis, its executive chairman, as permanent chief executive in January 2026 following the company’s emergence from bankruptcy. Science Applications International Corp. named James Regan permanent chief executive in February 2026, after he had served on the board since 2023.

    These appointments do not signal a collapse in succession planning. Internal promotions remain the dominant route to the corner office. Instead, boards are broadening the pipeline and building optionality into leadership plans amid elevated executive churn.

    The shift also reflects who now occupies board seats. A growing share of directors are active or recently retired chief executives with significant operating experience. That evolution has created a viable bench within the boardroom itself. Directors can be evaluated over years of strategy sessions and crisis deliberations before they are ever tapped to run the company. Governance advisers describe the approach as succession by design.

    What it means for C-suite contenders

    For aspiring chief executives, the competitive landscape has changed.

    The bar for readiness is higher. Internal candidates are no longer competing only against peers down the hall. They may also be measured against directors who have already run public companies and have established credibility with investors. In volatile periods, that experience can appear lower risk.

    Timelines are also compressing. If boards are informally cultivating potential successors in their own ranks, internal candidates must signal enterprise-level leadership earlier. Waiting for a formal succession process may be too late. Executives who want the top job need visibility in board discussions, exposure to enterprise risk, and a clearly articulated long-term strategy.

    There is an opportunity in the shift as well. Boards that elevate directors are often looking for leaders who combine operational depth with governance sophistication. C-suite executives who engage proactively with directors, serve on external boards, and broaden their scope beyond a single function can strengthen their case. The more an executive already operates like a chief executive, the harder it is for a board to choose someone else—even one of its own.

    Ruth Umoh

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  • Tinder is Testing AI Features That Look Through Your Camera Roll

    Tinder is testing a new AI-powered feature that looks at the photos on your camera roll in an effort to find you better matches, according to an announcement from parent company Match Group. And while that might sounds like a rather invasive way to find a match, the dating app notes that it’s opt-in and will hopefully combat what it calls “swipe fatigue.”

    The feature is called Chemistry and was announced by Match Group CEO Spencer Rascoff during an earnings call on Tuesday. The AI asks users interactive questions and seeks to find out what matters to a given user the most.

    “Powered by AI, this interactive matching feature—a major part of Tinder’s upcoming 2026 product experience—gets to know users through fun, conversational prompts and, with permission, learns from their camera roll to better understand their interests and personality,” the company said in a prepared statement published online.

    Gizmodo hasn’t tested the feature yet, but the company is clearly stressing that it will only look through your camera roll if users give it permission to do just that. The Tinder app has gotten a refresh for Apple’s Liquid Glass on iOS and the company thinks that its new AI experiments will help improve the user experience.

    “Using deep learning, Chemistry aims to reduce dating app fatigue by surfacing a few highly relevant profiles each day—driving more compatible matches and more engaging conversations,” a Tinder spokesperson told Gizmodo via email.

    The AI feature is currently being tested in Australia and New Zealand. The company has plans to roll out the feature to additional countries “in the coming months,” but it’s not clear yet when that might include the U.S.

    Aside from Chemistry, Tinder is also experimenting with other features, like a new Modes navigation, which was launched in September. Users can choose things like College Mode, which includes meeting new people with a friend in their college community or Double Date Mode, which lets you match with other pairs. Tinder reports that Double Date has been popular, particularly in Europe and with Gen Z more broadly.

    The app is also reportedly being improved on the tech side of things, with Android startup times 38% faster and crash rates reduced by 32%, according to Match. The company also claims that app stability on iOS has improved considerably.

    Matt Novak

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  • Match and Bumble Dominate Online Dating. But Do They Make Good Investments?

    Match and Bumble Dominate Online Dating. But Do They Make Good Investments?


    Bumble is one of the fastest growing dating apps. Unsplash

    With Valentine’s Day quickly approaching, it’s time to talk about whether you’re getting your bang for your buck when it comes to dating apps, many of which charge a monthly fee to use and have shares publicly traded on stock exchanges. If you’re lucky, hours spent swiping on Tinder will pay off in the form of a soulmate, but we are not just talking about dividends in romance. 

    Online dating is the most popular way that couples meet, according to a 2019 study by Stanford sociologist Michael Rosenfeld. With more than 300 million people using dating apps around the world, the business of swiping left and right is expected to grow rapidly and reach $14.42 billion in revenue by 2030. The largest two players in the dating app market today are Match Group and Bumble (BMBL). Match, which owns Match.com, Tinder, Hinge and several other dating apps, alone accounts for about 30 percent of the market

    While publicly traded dating apps have lagged behind the Dow Jones and S&P 500 indexes over the past few years and Silicon Valley investors are reluctant to bet on this category altogether, the largest dating app companies actually perform fairly well financially. Match, for example, has seen its revenue and profit grow in recent years. In 2022, its host of dating apps brought in $3.1 billion in revenue, 62 percent of which came from subscription. 

    During the third quarter of 2023, the most recent time period with available financial information, Match’s revenue rose 9 percent year-over-year to $882 million with an operating profit of $244 million, giving it a profit margin of nearly 20 percent.

    One item of concern in Match’s financial report, however, is a decline in the number of paying users. Subscribers to all Match-owned apps fell 5 percent in the September quarter year-over-year to about 15.7 million, with Tinder feeling the brunt of the loss as a result of a 50 percent price hike last year. Tinder now charges $24.99 per month for its platinum membership, inching closer to Bumble’s $39.99 monthly plan, one of the most expensive on the market.

    Read Also: Match Group CEO Mandy Ginsberg Deciphers the Business of Love

    After the pandemic spurred the busiest year of online dating in Tinder’s history, the app took note of what attracted Gen Z users, observing that the younger generations value authenticity, boundaries, and fluidity when seeking relationships. On a call with analysts in November 2023, Match CFO Gary Swidler said the company has adapted to Gen Z users’ preferences in the form of weekly subscription. “What management is trying to do there is create an app refresh and change the product to try to give the Gen Z audience more of what they’re looking for, which is to be more self-expressive,” Ygal Arounian, an analyst with Citigroup, told Observer. 

    Meanwhile, Hinge remains a standout in Match’s portfolio of dating apps. With user numbers exploding in recent quarters, the relationship-centered app is on pace to reach $400 million in sales this year, according to Match’s latest quarterly earnings report. 

    Match’s leading competitor, Bumble, came onto the online dating scene in 2014 offering a female-focused experience. While a younger company, Bumble’s niche has allowed for consistent revenue and user growth. The company’s total revenue increased 18.4 percent to $275.5 million in the third quarter of 2023 from a year prior. Paying users also increased to 3.8 million from 3.3 million year-over-year.

    While these are impressive numbers, monetizing dating apps that are “designed to be deleted” has proved to be a challenge. Most dating apps utilize a “freemium” model where the service and platform are free but users can pay to improve their experience. Match, Tinder, Hinge and Bumble each offer tiered membership plans with prices ranging from $9.99 to $500 per month. According to an analysis by Morgan Stanley, about 32 percent of the U.S.’s single population use online dating and, of those, slightly more than a quarter pay. 

    “It’s a balance,” said Arounian. “Both Match and Bumble are trying to convert free users to paying users, but they need to maintain the quality of the experience while being careful about putting too many things behind a paywall and hurting the experience.”

    While the Match family of dating apps remain the largest in the market, Bumble is growing fast, on track to secure 20 percent of dating app users in the U.S., according to InvestorPlace. However, recent leadership changes could mean uncertainties down the road. In November 2023, Lidiane Jones, former CEO of Slack, took over as CEO of Bumble, replacing the app’s founder Whitney Wolfe Herd. 

    As for Match, the company may be facing shareholder activism in the coming months. Activist hedge fund firm Elliott Management has been slowly increasing stake in the company to $1 billion to become its third largest shareholder, suggesting a push for some sort of governance or strategic changes. 

    Match and Bumble Dominate Online Dating. But Do They Make Good Investments?





    Maddie Whitaker

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  • Match Group promotes Faye Iosotaluno to Tinder CEO | TechCrunch

    Match Group promotes Faye Iosotaluno to Tinder CEO | TechCrunch

    Dating app behemoth Match Group has named Faye Iosotaluno as the new Tinder CEO, two years after the previous CEO Renate Nyborg left the company in August 2022. During that time, Match Group CEO Bernard Kim held the position.

    Iosotaluno has been working at the Match Group since 2017. She was promoted from the company’s chief strategy officer position to Tinder’s chief operating officer in 2022 when Nyborg departed. Nyborg is now building an AI companion startup backed by Sequoia and Andrew Ng’s AI Fund.

    “Faye’s understanding of the dating category is unparalleled and coupled together with her remarkable leadership capabilities, I know Tinder will continue to lead the category,” said Bernard Kim, Match Group CEO in a statement.

    Match Group has seen the number of paid users decline over the last few quarters. However, in its Q3 2023 earnings report, it said that due to price optimization, overall revenue through paying users increased.

    In September, the company introduced a pricey $499 per month subscription to get matched with “most sought after” profiles.

    Last year, as a part of a settlement with Google, Match Group was allowed to offer in-app purchases through its own billing services on Play Store alongside Google’s own billing system. This means the dating giant will have to pay 26% or 11% (depending on the type of payment) to Google. This user choice billing agreement between two companies will go into effect by March 31, 2024. This cut might increase in-app purchase earnings for Tinder and other Match Group properties.

    Tinder also started to experiment with an AI-powered photo selection feature last year. In August, Match Group appointed former Zyanga head of growth Mark Kantor as head of vice president of innovation to focus on introducing AI-powered features across its properties.

    Earlier this week, The Wall Street Journal reported that activist investor Elliot Investment Mangement has built up a stake of $1 billion in the Match Group. Elliot will discuss changes with the Match Group to improve the company’s performance, according to the report.

    Match Group’s stock has dipped over 13% in the last 12 months. However, on the back of the reports of Elliot’s investment and appointment of the new CEO, the share prices jumped over 3% during after-hours on Tuesday.

    Ivan Mehta

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