Create a free account, or log in

Atlassian co-founder Scott Farquhar steps down as CEO, will remain as special advisor

Atlassian co-founder Scott Farquhar will soon step down as co-CEO, but will continue as a board member and special advisor.
Tegan Jones
Tegan Jones
Atlassian-Scott-Farquhar
Atlassian co-founder Scott Farquhar.

In a significant shift in its executive ranks, Atlassian has announced co-founder Scott Farquhar will step down as co-CEO. Mike Cannon-Brookes will now become the sole CEO of the $79 billion software unicorn.

This news was announced alongside the former Smart50 winnerโ€™s third-quarter results early on Friday morning. According to a note sent to Atlassian staff โ€“ and later published โ€“ by Farquhar, he is stepping down after 23 years to focus more on his family and philanthropic efforts.

Despite the departure, Farquhar will maintain an active role within the company. He will remain a board member and take on the role of โ€˜special advisorโ€™. His last day as co-CEO will be August 31.

โ€œIโ€™m looking forward to spending some time with my young family, improving the world via philanthropy with Skip Foundation and Pledge 1%, investing with Skip Capital, as well as mentoring other tech CEOs,โ€ Farquhar said.

โ€œAnd while there is never a perfect time to make this change, I take comfort in my decision knowing Atlassian is so well placed for the future.โ€

SmartCompany understands that as a special advisor, Farquhar will be more involved in the business than a typical board member โ€“ acting as a soundboard and spending more time with the leadership team.

While traditionally Cannon-Brookes has headed up the engineering teams, with Farquhar focusing more on the go-to-market teams, the pair have often swapped in and out of those roles as needed. It is understood there will be no significant effect on those teams as a result of the departure.

Atlassianโ€™s stock experienced an 8% drop in after-hours trading following the announcement. However, the company has shown strong financial performance, reporting a 30% increase in revenue to US$1.2 billion compared to Q3 2023. The company also reported subscription revenue was up 41% year-on-year.

Atlassian posted a net income of US$12.8 million this quarter. This marks a significant recovery compared to the net loss of US$209 million recorded in Q3 2023.

Looking ahead, the company projects its total revenue for the upcoming fourth quarter to be between US$1.12 billion and US$1.13 billion.

Farquhar and Cannon-Brookes met at university and founded Atlassian in 2002, before going on to list the tech company on the NASDAQ in 2015.

โ€œWe got to work on the heels of the dot com bust and unbeknownst to us, we were kickstarting the Australian tech industry,โ€ Farquhar said.

โ€œTwenty-three years later, we continue to innovate by leading the world as the largest company committed to remote work with Team Anywhereโ€.

โ€œToday, rockets donโ€™t launch into orbit without Atlassianโ€™s software.โ€

If you work for a startup and want unlimited access to SmartCompanyplease sign up here for a free subscription worth $99, and gain access to a library of ebooks to help you on your journey.