KEY POINTS
  • Twilio has commenced an operational review of its Segment business unit, set to conclude in March, after months of activist scrutiny on the struggling business unit.
  • Twilio acquired Segment in 2020 for $3.2 billion, but activists have pushed management to break up the business unit or sell the whole company.
  • Founder and CEO Jeff Lawson was replaced in January by Khozema Shipchandler, who said that the company would take a "fresh look" at its businesses.

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Jeff Lawson, (C) Founder, CEO, & Chairman of Communications software provider Twilio Inc., rings the opening bell to celebrate his company's IPO at the New York Stock Exchange in New York City, June 23, 2016.

Twilio announced alongside its fiscal fourth quarter earnings on Wednesday it would begin an operational review of an underperforming business unit that has been scrutinized by shareholder activists to "identify the appropriate path forward"

The company also said it had recorded a $286 million impairment related to the business unit, which it was also renaming back to Segment. It had formerly been known as Twilio Data & Applications, and was born out of Twilio's $3.2 billion acquisition of the namesake Segment in 2020.

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