Vodafone boss Vittorio Colao to step down
- Published
Vodafone's chief executive Vittorio Colao is to leave the mobile phone giant in October after 10 years at the helm.
He will be replaced by current finance director Nick Read.
The announcement came as Vodafone reported, external an annual profit of €2.8bn (£2.5bn), compared with a loss of €6.1bn last year when it wrote down the value of its Indian business.
Mr Colao said it had been a "real privilege" to lead Vodafone.
He added he would be working flat out until his departure in October, but that he had no plans after that.
'Dramatic transformation'
Mr Colao has presided over some major changes. In 2013, Vodafone sold its stake in Verizon Wireless to US telecoms group Verizon Communications for $130bn, which at the time was one of the biggest deals in corporate history.
Last week, Vodafone paid €18.4bn to buy Liberty Global's cable TV and broadband networks in Germany and Eastern Europe.
Mr Colao was appointed group chief executive in July 2008. Vodafone said that the company had been transformed by him from a consumer-focused 2G/3G mobile operator to one with global leadership in the "Internet of Things".
Its customer base has also doubled from 269 million to 536 million across 25 countries.
In a media conference call following the results, Mr Colao said: "It has been a real privilege to lead the group through a decade of massive strategic transformation culminating in today's good performance."
Vodafone's chairman, Gerard Kleisterlee, said: "On behalf of the board, I would like to express our gratitude to Vittorio for an outstanding tenure.
"He has been an exemplary leader and strategic visionary who has overseen a dramatic transformation of Vodafone."
- Published9 May 2018
- Published24 April 2018