DocuSign CEO Dan Springer Steps Down Following Firm Losing Over 60% of Its Value Year To Date (cnbc.com) 47
DocuSign CEO Dan Springer is stepping down, the company announced Tuesday. The decision comes after the e-signature software maker lost more than 60% of its value year to date. From a report: The company didn't provide a reason for his departure but said Springer "has agreed to step aside," effective immediately. Chairman of the Board Maggie Wilderotter will serve as interim CEO as the company begins its search for the next executive. Shares were up about 1% when markets opened. Springer took on the role of chief executive in 2017 and took the company public in 2018. DocuSign was able to capitalize on the Covid-19 pandemic as more consumers shifted to online transactions and deals. But its business has been slowing in recent quarters, especially as it faces tough comparisons to its dramatic growth in 2020 and early 2021. The deteriorating macro environment has also impacted the company. Shares were off 80% from their 52-week high as of Friday's close.
Honestly kind of surprised (Score:3)
Re:Honestly kind of surprised (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Honestly kind of surprised (Score:5, Insightful)
What this shows is the downside of a business-valuation model based on gambling, which is what most of the large US IT businesses are based on. The company is doing well, it has a solid business model, and its future is reasonably safe, but because that makes it difficult to bet on it gets dinged.
In the meantime a startup selling fart-smell attachments for cellphones so you can prank your friends is valued by the stock market gamblers at a billion dollars.
Re: (Score:3)
In the meantime a startup selling fart-smell attachments for cellphones so you can prank your friends is valued by the stock market gamblers at a billion dollars.
Is there an enterprise version? Asking for a friend.
Re: (Score:2)
It took me until this post that I realized I misread the company name as DoorDash instead of DocuSign. I thought at first maybe DoorDash had pivoted into some new markets that I hadn't heard about...it almost made sense in my head.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Did it even fail to grow, or did the share market just tank for the entire industry regardless of growth and investors had a cry?
Re: (Score:2)
The massively profitable corporation I work for (for example) has lost about 20% of it's value over the last few months but is still 10% above the 5 year share price, so what's the problem?
Re: (Score:2)
My guess, without looking at the company financials, is that it is a bit of both. They benefitted so much from the COVID work environment, that they were always going to drop down from that high, plus the entire market is losing value. This will be a combination of general market sentiment and a correction of a temporary overvaluation thanks to the unsustainable growth due to COVID.
Re:Honestly kind of surprised (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not surprised. The stock is back where it was pre-pandemic, around $60/share, but during the pandemic it was as high as $314. So technically shareholders have lost nothing compared to the original investment, but that's not how shareholders or Board members think. They think it dropped from $314 to $60 because that was the high.
And to be fair, they're not wrong. DocuSign got a pandemic bump due to work-from-home. They did reasonably well, but at some point the pandemic would end and people would want to go into work, losing the driving force that kicked their stock up so high. A good CEO would realize this and leverage the big bump in stock to sell more shares and fund some strategic initiatives to ensure that DocuSign leveraged what the pandemic brought to them so they were ready for a post-pandemic world. They did not, and the stock went back to it's pre-pandemic levels; in essence he failed to capitalize on that bump and solidify their growth. This is also true of Peloton, Zoom, and many others. They all congratulated themselves for being the right solution when a disaster hit, but failed to realize that they didn't really do anything, just be in the right place at the right time, and not capitalize on that fortune to build more success. When the world went back to normal, their stocks corrected back to pre-pandemic.
In DocuSign's case, the pandemic only proved the value of what they do and I've seen everything from startups to established companies like Adobe come out with competitive solutions. So not only did they fail to prepare for the post-pandemic, they were complacent by not aggressively defending their position and allowing others to step into their market. Boom. Done.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
I do think they could have capitalized on that though. The CEO's job is to make money for their shareholders. So he should have either leveraged the much higher stock price to bring in extra liquidity and used that to go on a Marketing blitz and product development spree to continue to differentiate and stay ahead (their UI is honestly not my favorite
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
in essence he failed to capitalize on that bump and solidify their growth.
No. He failed to solidify their fantasy share price. People didn't stop using DocuSign. It went from a basically unheard of tool to a completely standard form filling tool used by most mega corporations.
The stock market fantasy that was going on sadly has zero to do with growth. Despite its rise it never had any business being a $300+ company in the first place, not unlike Peloton, Zoom or any of those others which were pumped up entirely by the homes and dreams of wallstreet.
A sudden injection in cash in a
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Honestly kind of surprised (Score:5, Interesting)
It's heavily used in B2B, nearly ever single MSA at the Fortune 200 I work at is finalized using DocuSign and we're talking hundreds if not thousands of signatures per year.
The problem is that for the longest time, DocuSign was the only player in the market. I had a conversation a few years ago when I did a Cybersecurity 3rd party risk assessment on the Adobe product that DocuSign increases prices every single year.
Between the poor customer service and constant price increases the competition doesn't have a high bar to hit to surpass DocuSign.
Right now DocuSign is coasting on reputation but just as it was once said "No one ever got fired for buying IBM.", it's time is ending without major changes.
Re: Honestly kind of surprised (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The document has a cryptographic hash to show that it isn't modified after signatures, just like a MD5 checksum that is provided for many downloads to verify authenticity. This is better than any paper contract which can be more easily manipulated.
At this point DocuSign is well accepted in courts (US) and there isn't a need for anyone to testify about the process to obtain the signature and authenticate the contents of the document.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, they have the worst pricing in the market. Everyone else does the same job easier but at 1/7th the price.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The "company value" is based on what the market thinks. At the start of COVID, growth will have outpaced expectations, so the value shot up, probably to more than the company was actually worth in the long run. As people go back to the office and usage drops, the market sees the drop in revenue and reacts accordingly (even though they should have known from the start that the COVID spike was going to be a temporary glitch). Combined with a general drop in the market, that is probably all you are seeing,
Re: (Score:1)
Triumph of the bean counters of jello? (Score:2)
Trying to imagine how they assessed the value of the company to get the 60% drop in value. It's not like the bean counters could have made a mistake in the first place? Sort of like measuring jello with a hot glue gun and a large hammer?
If they were looking at the customer side, then the new valuation certainly can't be based on any imminent or recent shortage of suckers.
Oh, wait. It's a stock market story and the metric must be market cap. Mystery solved. If the stock market had perfect information about a
Net loss? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
The title tries to suggest the 2 events might be related, but no one involved has said anything about it.
So it might just as well have been "CEO steps down while bananas are yellow."
Better titles (Score:2)
CEO steps down after unrealistic investors realize they were being unrealistic.
7 months after profit takers cause stock price to plummet 98 points in a day, CEO Says "Fuck This".
Half a year after revealing positive earnings leading to historic 42% stock price loss in 1 day CEO is "So done with this bullshit".
And So on, honestly I applaud the man for staying on after December last year. Really what they
Re: (Score:2)
I like yours better than mine. However I don't think number 2 would be true.. Ever.. :D
It seemed totally useless to me (Score:1)
Or in other words: Has anyone ever been convicted of forging a signature with Docusign ?
Re: (Score:2)
Well. I guess the 1,000,000 customers that DocuSign processes legally binding documents for better get ahold of you, random internet AC "lawyer", to help them file suit.
I've never used the product, I haven't used a competitors product, I don't have the foggiest clue how they secure the process, and I don't have any other type of horse in the race. But I'd have to imagine somewhere along the process of developing, implementing, selling, and defending their product/service they would have consulted a lawyer
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
I repeat:
How can the scrawl I sent them possibly be confirmed as my signature ?
Or in other words: Has anyone ever been convicted of forging a signature with Docusign ?
Re: (Score:2)
How can the scrawl I sent them possibly be confirmed as my signature ?
They aren't confirming it based on the picture of your signature, that's just a silly thought all together. (I have signed documents that way. I'd be shocked if it would hold up in any court, though.) There is a chain of trust established with your logon information. Much in the way that the little "pascoea" in the top left corner of this comment assures you that I wrote it. As long as I keep my password secure, you can be assured my shitposting is mine.
If you've never received a secure document before,
Re: (Score:1)
As I recall it, I bought a house with an email address and a cut and pasted scrawl.
But maybe you are correct and I misremember.
Or maybe some organisations just don't bother with all that relationship stuff and Docusign don't check that they do ?
Interest Rates (Score:3)
Good luck finding a new guy! With interest rates headed for the Moon and the last guy getting shitcanned (from a deal-attestation service as the economy entered a recession, per Atlanta Fed) the Board is likely to savage the new guy too when economic reality accurately reflects in the income statement.
Shareholders ought to think twice about that Board being able to attract talent. Stimmies and stonks shouldn't drive a Board.
What happens if poor management drives the company into the ground? Who will authenticate those attestations for the next 30 years?
COVID (Score:2)
I sold my dad's house during COVID and everything went through Docusign. Sold a house earlier this year and everything was signed in person. Maybe Docusign was artificially inflated by all of that?
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe Docusign was artificially inflated by all of that?
Or maybe your sample size of two ended up being one technically minded sale and one luddite. DocuSign is everywhere, even now that we're open. I have contractors walk to my desk** to tell me a DocuSign link is in my inbox. You have to be incredibly stupid to back away after adopting an efficient paper free process.
**IN FUCKING GERMANY, Fatherland of the inefficient bullshit paperwork.
COVID bump (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
There's no mystery here! (Score:3)
Cripes, anybody can do a quick bit of research and see that Docusign has a very negative PE ratio. It's way overvalued and has never turned a profit since going public. Right now investors are seeking value in their portfolios with the tightening market and Docusign while a good product isn't making bank despite good revenue numbers per their last quarterly/annual report. [docusign.com] They brought in $2.1B, an increase up 45% YoY and still:
net loss per basic and diluted share was $0.36 on 197 million shares outstanding compared to $1.31 on 186 million shares outstanding in fiscal 2021.
They're spending more than they're bringing in and also doing stock buy-backs to try and prop up the share prices. This is squarely on the shoulders of the CEO and the Board.
Hopefully, the new CEO can clean up their balance sheet, or a bigger fish may likely come in and buy them since their valuation is tanking.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Well they still have revenue coming in, their cost structure needs to be trimmed. I do think somebody like a Google, Microsoft or an Adobe would buy them and do the dirty work of cutting the fat.