Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen announced plans to step down after 18 years leading the software company, marking the end of a tenure defined by a strategic shift to a subscription-based software-as-a-service model.
The departure places Adobe at a pivotal moment as it navigates the integration of artificial intelligence into its core product suite. The leadership transition will impact a company that has scaled significantly under Narayen’s direction. The exact timeline for Narayen’s exit remains pending the board of directors naming a successor. Narayen will remain on the board and assume the role of chair after stepping down from the CEO position.
In a memo to employees, Narayen stated that he is confident in the company’s future leadership and technology. During his tenure, Adobe grew from approximately 3,000 employees to more than 30,000. The company’s financial performance also increased, with revenue rising from less than $1 billion to more than $25 billion. These figures illustrate the scale of the company’s expansion under his management.
Narayen led the launch of the Creative Suite subscription, which later evolved into the Creative Cloud. This transition shifted the company’s primary revenue model from perpetual software licenses to recurring subscription revenue. The move influenced the broader software industry’s adoption of similar service-based models.
In the same memo to employees, Narayen highlighted the role of artificial intelligence in the company’s future trajectory. “The next era of creativity is being written right now — shaped by AI, by new workflows and by entirely new forms of expression,” Narayen wrote. He added, “What gives me the greatest confidence isn’t just our technology — it’s our people.”
Adobe provides creative, document, and marketing software solutions. The company’s product portfolio includes Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere Pro, and Acrobat. The company is headquartered in San Jose, California.




