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Ryan Roslansky
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Ryan Roslansky (born December 4, 1977) is an American entrepreneur who is the chief executive officer (CEO) of LinkedIn, a business-related social networking website, since June 2020. [2] He started with LinkedIn in 2009 and was instrumental in the $1.5 billion acquisition of Lynda.com in 2015, the largest acquisition in LinkedIn's history at that time.[3] In 2021, he was named to Forbes CEO Next list.[4]
Key Information
Career
[edit]Roslansky left college in his sophomore year to focus full time on a company he and two roommates created. He became CEO of the company, Housing Media, and in 1999 it was acquired by USHousing.com.[3] He went to Yahoo!, where he met and worked under Jeff Weiner for five years. [2] After a short stint at Glam Media, Roslansky went to LinkedIn in 2009 as one of Weiner's first hires. Weiner named Roslansky his replacement as LinkedIn CEO on February 5, 2020.[5] In 2025, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella announced Roslansky would take on broader responsibilities overseeing the Microsoft Office productivity unit, as an Executive Vice President.[6]

Roslansky joined the company in May 2009 and held leadership roles in every part of LinkedIn’s business. He led the evolution of LinkedIn’s products into a global ecosystem of more than 756 million members, 57 million companies, 120 thousand schools, and 38 thousand skills. He launched several new initiatives for the company including the Influencer program[7] (which includes Richard Branson, Arianna Huffington, and Bill Gates, among others,) and founded the editorial team which today boasts 75+ writers and editors.[8] In 2015, Roslansky was a key part of the $1.5 billion (~$1.93 billion in 2024) acquisition of Lynda.com, the largest acquisition in LinkedIn's history at that time.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Microsoft and Linkedin pledged to upskill 25 million workers[9] and in 2021, has surpassed that number. However in 2025, LinkedIn admitted that skill certificates rarely pay off. [10][11]
In 2021, Roslansky partnered with John Kerry on an effort to address Climate Change through a focus on job creation.[12]
Open to Work
[edit]In 2026, Roslansky co-published a book with Aneesh Raman called Open to Work[13]: How to Get Ahead in the Age of AI focused on helping people navigate their careers in an AI world, published by Harper Collins[14]
The Path
[edit]In 2023, Roslansky launched The Path video series on LinkedIn where he interviews business leaders about their career paths. [15]
The Great Reshuffle
[edit]In 2021, Roslansky coined the term Great Reshuffle to describe talent shifts occurring through data on the LinkedIn platform.[16]
Other interests
[edit]Roslansky is on the board of trustees of the Paley Center for Media. [17] He was previously on the board of directors of Intuit,[18]
Personal life
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Intuit Appoints Ryan Roslansky, CEO of LinkedIn, and Eric S. Yuan, CEO and Founder of Zoom, to its Board of Directors". Intuit (Press release). Mountain View, California. Business Wire. May 4, 2023. Archived from the original on June 3, 2023. Retrieved July 12, 2024.
- ^ a b Meisenzahl, Mary. "Meet Ryan Roslansky, LinkedIn's next CEO who was Jeff Weiner's first hire back in 2009". Business Insider. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
- ^ a b c Chaykowski, Kathleen. "LinkedIn's New Head of Consumer Product, Ryan Roslansky, Wants To Transform How Workers Learn". Forbes. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
- ^ Bertoni, Steven. "Forbes CEO Next 50: The Up-And-Coming Leaders Set To Revolutionize American Business". Forbes. Retrieved July 17, 2021.
- ^ "LinkedIn's Jeff Weiner will hand CEO role to Ryan Roslansky and become executive chairman". GeekWire. February 5, 2020. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
- ^ Novet, Jordan (June 4, 2025). "Microsoft gives LinkedIn chief Roslansky added role running Office". CNBC. Retrieved July 15, 2025.
- ^ "The Surprising Brilliance Of The LinkedIn Influencers Program". www.linkedin.com. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "LinkedIn Rebrands Editorial Team to LinkedIn News as it Continues to Expand News Coverage and Content". Social Media Today. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "Microsoft pledges to upskill 25 million workers for the 'COVID-19 economy'". VentureBeat. June 30, 2020. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "Skill certificates rarely pay off | LinkedIn". www.linkedin.com. Retrieved October 2, 2025.
- ^ "MSN". www.msn.com. Retrieved October 2, 2025.
- ^ "Solving climate change means creating jobs". BostonGlobe. November 8, 2021. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "Announcing Open to Work: How to Get Ahead in the Age of AI". January 13, 2026.
- ^ "HarperCollins Publishers to publish Open to Work - How to Get Ahead in the Age of AI by Ryan Roslansky and Aneesh Raman". Feb 24,2026.
{{cite news}}: Check date values in:|date=(help) - ^ "LinkedIn's CEO is talking to execs and leaders who walked 'The Path' to success". TubeFilter. January 27, 2023.
- ^ "Gen Z and Millennials Are Leading a 'Great Reshuffle.' Here's What That Means". Time. October 17, 2021. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
- ^ "THE PALEY CENTER FOR MEDIA ANNOUNCES NEW MEMBERS TO ITS ESTEEMED BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND LOS ANGELES BOARD OF GOVERNORS". PRNewsWire (Press release). Retrieved May 3, 2023.
- ^ "Intuit Appoints Enterprise AI Leader Bill McDermott and Financial Technology Innovator Adena Friedman to Board of Directors". Intuit. November 20, 2025. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
- ^ Edgecliffe-Johnson, Andrew (July 15, 2023). "LinkedIn's Ryan Roslansky: 'You can only learn how to be a CEO by being a CEO'". Financial Times.
Ryan Roslansky
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Upbringing and Family Background
Ryan Roslansky grew up in Lake Tahoe, California, where his parents worked as real estate entrepreneurs.[7][8] Their entrepreneurial background instilled in him a sense of self-belief and adaptability, emphasizing flexibility in pursuing opportunities over rigid life paths.[8] At the age of 12, during seventh grade, Roslansky relocated alone from California to Florida to attend a tennis academy, living in a dormitory with seven other international students.[8] This move reflected his early athletic pursuits in tennis, which his parents had anticipated might lead him away from traditional schooling or college.[7] His parents demonstrated strong support for unconventional choices, offering no resistance when, as a college sophomore, he decided to drop out to focus on a startup venture; they responded affirmatively, asking only if it aligned with his desires.[8][7]Education and Early Influences
Roslansky attended the University of California, Davis, enrolling as a freshman in 1996 during the early commercialization of the internet.[6] He dropped out in his sophomore year at age 20 to focus full-time on developing an internet startup, prioritizing practical experience in emerging technology over formal completion of his studies.[7] [9] His early influences stemmed from a peripatetic youth and self-directed learning in digital tools. Born in South Lake Tahoe, California, Roslansky relocated at age 12 to a tennis academy in Florida, where he completed high school amid rigorous athletic training.[8] [10] At 18, prior to college, he taught himself web graphic design through Lynda Weinman's book The Macintosh Bible Guide to Designing Web Graphics, applying these skills to create websites for local businesses and foreshadowing his pivot to online entrepreneurship.[7] These experiences cultivated a hands-on approach to technology and business, evident in his co-founding of Housing Media in the late 1990s—one of the earliest internet real estate classified directories—while still at Davis, which accelerated his departure from academia.[9] Roslansky's parents supported this shift, reflecting a family emphasis on initiative over conventional credentials.[7]Professional Career
Early Roles and Entry into Tech
Roslansky entered the technology sector during the late 1990s internet boom by co-founding Housing Media in January 1997, shortly after briefly attending college, which he left after a few months to focus on the venture.[2][8] The company operated as one of the earliest online real estate and rental classified directories, with Roslansky serving as CEO and leveraging self-taught web graphic design skills acquired at age 18 from Lynda Weinman's book to build its digital presence.[7][11] Housing Media was acquired by USHousing.com in 1999, marking an early exit for Roslansky in the nascent online classifieds space.[11][12] Following the acquisition, Roslansky joined Yahoo! in December 1999, holding various general management and global product roles for approximately five years until June 2004.[2][13] During this period, he collaborated with Jeff Weiner, contributing to initiatives such as search monetization efforts and Yahoo's 2003 acquisition of Overture, an early online advertising firm.[7] These experiences honed his product management expertise amid Yahoo's expansion in search and advertising technologies. Roslansky then took a senior vice president of products and content role at Glam Media, a women's lifestyle content network, where he helped scale the platform from a top-100 global Comscore property to a top-10 ranking within 18 months.[2][14] This brief tenure, post-2004 and prior to his 2009 move to LinkedIn, emphasized content-driven growth strategies in digital media, bridging his entrepreneurial roots with larger-scale product leadership.[15]Pre-CEO Positions at LinkedIn
Roslansky joined LinkedIn in May 2009, initially taking on senior product leadership responsibilities amid the company's early expansion phase. Over the subsequent years, he advanced through multiple executive roles spanning product development, sales solutions, marketing solutions, talent solutions, and learning initiatives, gaining operational experience across LinkedIn's core business segments.[1] This broad exposure positioned him as a key architect in transforming LinkedIn from a nascent networking site into a multifaceted platform leveraging talent and economic data graphs.[15] By the mid-2010s, Roslansky had risen to Chief Product Officer, a role he held for over a decade, during which he directed the strategic evolution of LinkedIn's product suite to emphasize user-generated content, professional identity management, and enterprise tools.[2] In this capacity, he oversaw engineering and design teams responsible for innovations such as enhanced profile algorithms and integration of learning resources, which contributed to sustained user growth and monetization through premium subscriptions and B2B services.[1] Immediately prior to his CEO appointment, Roslansky served as Senior Vice President of Product (also referred to as Global Head of Product), managing all product teams focused on forward-looking features like AI-driven recommendations and collaborative tools.[16] This position, effective until June 1, 2020, involved coordinating cross-functional efforts to align product roadmaps with market demands for skills-based hiring and remote work facilitation, laying groundwork for LinkedIn's post-acquisition synergies under Microsoft ownership.[1]Ascension to CEO and Dual Role at Microsoft
Ryan Roslansky joined LinkedIn in May 2009 as one of the first hires under then-new CEO Jeff Weiner, initially focusing on product development and sales solutions.[16] Over the subsequent decade, he advanced through senior roles, including Senior Vice President of Product, where he oversaw teams building core platform features and led key initiatives such as the integration following Microsoft's $26.2 billion acquisition of LinkedIn in December 2016.[16] [17] On February 5, 2020, LinkedIn announced that Roslansky would succeed Weiner as CEO, effective June 1, 2020, with Weiner transitioning to executive chairman to focus on broader social impact initiatives.[16] [17] This succession marked a planned leadership transition, emphasizing continuity in LinkedIn's mission to connect professionals, as Roslansky had been instrumental in shaping the platform's product strategy during its growth phase under Microsoft ownership.[11] In June 2025, Microsoft expanded Roslansky's responsibilities into a dual leadership role, appointing him to oversee its Office productivity suite—including applications like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint—alongside Microsoft 365 Copilot AI tools, while retaining his position as LinkedIn CEO.[18] [19] This restructuring, announced on June 4, 2025, aimed to unify Microsoft's AI integration across consumer and enterprise platforms, leveraging Roslansky's experience in professional networking and skills-based tools to bridge LinkedIn's workforce data with Office's productivity ecosystem.[19] LinkedIn continued operating as an independent subsidiary, with Roslansky reporting directly to Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in both capacities.[20]Leadership and Strategies at LinkedIn
Key Initiatives and Terminology
Under Roslansky's leadership since June 2020, LinkedIn has advanced skills-based hiring through targeted product enhancements and partnerships. In March 2021, the company committed to enabling 250,000 organizations to conduct skills-based hires via updated recruiting tools, including de-emphasizing degree requirements in job postings and training recruiters to prioritize abilities over credentials.[21] This initiative built on the LinkedIn Skills Graph, a standardized ontology mapping over 35,000 skills to facilitate consistent terminology and matching between candidates and roles.[21] Pilots like Skills Path, tested with employers such as Microsoft and BlackRock, provided role-specific training pathways to bridge skill gaps and streamline hiring.[21] By November 2022, platform data indicated that 25% of skills for the same job titles had evolved since 2015, underscoring the need for such adaptive tools.[6] LinkedIn Learning expansions formed another pillar, with over 100 skill assessments launched—covering areas like Excel and React—resulting in 8 million badges added to user profiles by 2021 to verify competencies.[21] Features like "Cover Story" enabled users to showcase soft skills through video introductions, while Collaborative Articles aggregated member insights to surface collective expertise equivalent to 10 billion years of experience.[22] In response to AI-driven changes, where skills demands are projected to shift by at least 65% by 2030, Roslansky oversaw the addition of 300+ AI courses and a free Generative AI Professional Certificate to equip users for automation-impacted roles.[22] Tools like Skills Match in LinkedIn Recruiter further automated candidate evaluation by aligning verified skills to job requirements, reducing reliance on resumes.[22] Roslansky has emphasized terminology centered on a "skills-first" paradigm, defining it as evaluating talent based on demonstrable capabilities—hard skills like machine learning and soft skills like communication—rather than proxies such as degrees or job titles.[6][22] This contrasts with traditional pedigree-focused hiring, which he argues locks out qualified workers; for instance, pandemic-era analysis showed 70% skill overlap between food service and digital customer service positions, yet credential barriers persisted.[6] He frames jobs as bundles of tasks rather than fixed roles, promoting "redefining work" to prioritize productivity amid technological flux.[22] Partnerships, including with the World Economic Forum's Reskilling Revolution aiming to upskill 1 billion people by 2030, reinforce this lexicon of proactive skill-building over static qualifications.[21]Business Expansion and Revenue Milestones
Under Ryan Roslansky's leadership as CEO starting June 3, 2020, LinkedIn pursued expansion through diversification across its core revenue streams, including Talent Solutions for recruitment and hiring, Premium Subscriptions for individual users, Marketing Solutions for advertising, and Sales Navigator for B2B outreach.[23] This strategy emphasized monetizing professional networking via premium features and enterprise tools, contributing to consistent double-digit growth in multiple segments amid post-pandemic recovery in hiring and remote work trends.[24] Business lines expanded internationally, with revenue growth reported across regions, supported by integrations with Microsoft ecosystems like Dynamics 365 and enhanced data analytics for enterprise clients.[25] Revenue milestones reflect accelerated scaling: in Microsoft's fiscal year 2021 (ending June 2021), LinkedIn achieved $10.3 billion in annual revenue, surpassing the $10 billion threshold for the first time and marking a roughly 25% increase from the prior year under transitional leadership.[26] By fiscal year 2023 (ending June 2023), revenue exceeded $15 billion, doubling from pre-2020 levels and driven by a 10% year-over-year rise amid expanded premium offerings and ad revenue.[27] Fiscal year 2024 saw further growth to approximately $16.3 billion, with all business lines contributing, including a 9% overall increase fueled by premium and talent segments.[28] In fiscal year 2025 (ending June 2025), LinkedIn reported $17.81 billion in revenue, up 9% from the previous year, with Premium Subscriptions alone surpassing $2 billion in trailing 12-month revenue by January 2025—a 50% increase over two years—highlighting successful upselling to over 100 million subscribers.[29] [30] This period also featured quarterly gains, such as 10% growth in Q1 FY25 across Talent Solutions, Marketing, and Premium, underscoring sustained expansion despite economic headwinds in hiring markets.[24] Roslansky attributed the trajectory to platform investments in skills-based tools and AI-enhanced features, which broadened enterprise adoption without major acquisitions.[31]Integration with Microsoft and AI Emphasis
Following Microsoft's acquisition of LinkedIn in December 2016 for $26.2 billion, the platform has operated as an independent subsidiary, but under Ryan Roslansky's leadership as CEO since June 2020, integration efforts have deepened, particularly in leveraging shared infrastructure like Azure cloud services for data processing and scalability. In June 2025, Microsoft expanded Roslansky's responsibilities to include oversight of its consumer and small business productivity software division, encompassing Office applications such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Microsoft 365, and Teams, while he retained his LinkedIn CEO role.[19] [18] This dual position as Executive Vice President of Microsoft Office and Copilot was designed to unify the company's AI strategy across its ecosystem, enabling tighter synergy between LinkedIn's professional networking data and Microsoft's productivity tools.[32] [2] Roslansky has prioritized AI as a core driver of this integration, emphasizing its potential to accelerate workforce learning and collaborative innovation rather than automate jobs outright. In August 2023, he outlined a vision where AI facilitates skills-based matching on LinkedIn by analyzing user profiles against emerging job requirements, drawing on Microsoft's AI models for enhanced recommendations.[22] By September 2025, this extended to new commitments for AI-powered tools and training aimed at educators and job seekers, including integrations that embed LinkedIn skills data into Microsoft Copilot for personalized career guidance within Office apps.[33] Roslansky personally exemplifies this approach, stating in October 2025 that he relies on Copilot to draft nearly all high-stakes emails—including those to Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and global leaders—to refine language and ensure precision, highlighting AI's role in executive productivity without replacing human judgment.[34] [35] This Microsoft-wide AI emphasis under Roslansky has manifested in features like Copilot's expansion into Outlook for email summarization and reply drafting, tested and promoted by him in October 2025, which indirectly benefits LinkedIn users by aligning professional communication tools with platform data.[36] He argues that AI proficiency—such as using tools like Copilot for forward-thinking tasks—will increasingly trump traditional credentials in hiring, with LinkedIn's algorithms adapting to prioritize these skills via Microsoft-backed models.[37] Such integrations have supported LinkedIn's revenue growth through enterprise AI-enhanced services, though critics note potential privacy concerns in cross-platform data sharing remain unaddressed in public disclosures.[38]Achievements and Impact
Platform Growth and User Engagement
Under Ryan Roslansky's leadership as CEO since June 2020, LinkedIn's registered user base grew from 690 million members in 2020 to over 1 billion by 2024, reflecting sustained expansion amid global professional networking demands.[39] This growth included annual increases of approximately 10-15%, with the platform reaching 756 million users in 2021, 830 million in 2022, and 930 million in 2023.[39] The acceleration aligned with post-pandemic shifts toward remote work and digital hiring, though LinkedIn has not publicly disclosed precise monthly or daily active user breakdowns for the period, limiting direct comparisons of core engagement depth.[39] Engagement metrics showed notable gains, with LinkedIn reporting record levels in fiscal year 2024, including a 10% year-over-year revenue rise to $17.1 billion, partly driven by heightened platform activity.[40] Comments on posts rose over 30% in the most recent year tracked, while overall engagement rates increased by 44% year-over-year in recent data, fueled by features like video uploads and collaborative articles that encourage user interaction.[41][42] Approximately 300 million members were monthly active users as of 2025, with 16.2% engaging daily, equating to about 134 million daily actives from the billion-plus total.[43][42] These trends underscore Roslansky's emphasis on transforming LinkedIn into a dynamic content and skills-sharing hub, though critics note that registered user counts may inflate perceived activity without verified active usage rates.[15]| Year | Registered Users (millions) | Key Engagement Note |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 690 | Baseline pre-growth surge[39] |
| 2021 | 756 | Post-pandemic hiring boom[39] |
| 2022 | 830 | Increased content sharing[39] |
| 2023 | 930 | Video and skills features rise[39] |
| 2024 | 1,000+ | Record engagement reported[39][40] |
