Ad tech company Rubicon Project's president Greg Raifman is leaving along with 6 other top execs
greg raifman
greg raifman

(Greg Raifman, Rubicon president.Fox Business/YouTube)

Rubicon Project's president Greg Raifman is leaving the company as part of a leadership team restructuring that will see six other executives leave the ad tech company.

In an email to employees, seen by Business Insider, Rubicon Project CEO Frank Addante explained that the reorganization finalized a streamlining process that the company announced on November 2, when it said it was reducing 19% of its total headcount — affecting around 125 people.

Raifman, who has been part of the company's leadership team since 2013, will remain on Rubicon Project's board of directors.

A spokesman for the company declined to confirm the names of the other departing members of the senior leadership team or comment any further on the reasons for the restructuring.

Sale speculation

Addante said in the email: "Our business is strong and I am confident that this organizational structure will enable the company to be more agile, and allow us to benefit from greater scale and collaboration with our customers. These changes will allow us to better focus our efforts and I’m looking forward to the year ahead. I'll follow up shortly with more information on the new go-forward leadership structure."

The Wall Street Journal first reported in January that Rubicon Project had appointed investment bank Morgan Stanley to explore the company's strategic options, including a potential sale. The news was confirmed by Business Insider sources, although Rubicon Project has declined to comment on the appointment.

The departure of so many senior members of the Rubicon Project leadership team could indeed signal that the company is lining itself up for a sale.

Perhaps coincidentally (or perhaps not), Rubicon Project also recently updated the "leadership team" section of its website to only include its board directors, removing most members of the day-to-day management team, aside from Raifman and Addante.

The strong rumor currently swirling the ad tech community is that Rubicon Project is in talks to be acquired by a private equity company and taken off the public markets that have been so harsh to ad tech companies. Often, after companies sell to private equity firms, the majority of the senior management team leave the business.

Rubicon Project declined to comment on these rumors.

In a document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commision on February 22 — after this article was first published — Rubicon Project said Raifman was resigning his position on February 28 to "pursue another opportunity."

Rubicon Project also announced it was amending Raifman's severance agreement to: