Key Takeaways:
- Pendo appointed a 23-year-old chief AI officer, betting youth aids AI speed
- The CEO said the executive's age has proven advantageous for adoption
- Software firms face a talent gap as 67% of organizations create AI leadership roles
Key Takeaways:

When a software company hands its artificial intelligence strategy to a 23-year-old, the bet is that youth is an asset, not a liability — and Pendo's CEO says it's paying off.
Pendo, the product experience software provider valued at more than $2 billion after its 2021 Series F, appointed a 23-year-old as its chief AI officer in a move that challenges conventional assumptions about age and executive readiness in the technology sector. The company's CEO said the executive's age has proved advantageous, allowing the firm to move faster on AI adoption than competitors still debating organizational structure.
"Having someone who grew up with these tools in their hands means they don't have to unlearn old habits," Todd Olson, Pendo's chief executive officer, said in an interview. "Our chief AI officer thinks about AI the way my generation thought about the internet — as a given, not a novelty."
The appointment reflects a broader shift across the software industry as companies race to embed generative AI into their products and operations. Pendo, which helps companies analyze how users interact with their software, has integrated AI features including automated product recommendations and natural-language querying into its platform. The company competes in a crowded market that includes Amplitude, Mixpanel and Hotjar, where AI capabilities have become a key differentiator in winning enterprise contracts.
Pendo's decision to elevate a Gen Z executive to the C-suite comes as the technology industry confronts a talent shortage in AI leadership. A 2025 survey by Gartner found that 67% of organizations had created or planned to create a dedicated AI leadership role, up from 38% in 2023, but fewer than 1 in 5 reported having enough qualified internal candidates. Companies including Microsoft, Salesforce and Zoom have all appointed AI-focused executives in the past two years, though typically with decades of industry experience.
The generational gap in AI fluency is driving some firms to rethink traditional promotion paths. Pendo's chief AI officer joined the company through its associate product manager program and rose rapidly by leading internal AI prototyping efforts that reduced customer onboarding time by 40%, according to the company. The executive now oversees a team of 15 engineers and data scientists focused on product AI features.
"The traditional path to the C-suite assumes a 15-year apprenticeship, but AI is moving faster than that timeline allows," said Brian Elliott, a former Google executive who now advises startups on organizational design. "Companies that can identify and elevate talent based on capability rather than tenure will have a structural advantage."
Pendo's approach carries risks. The company is betting that raw AI fluency can compensate for the institutional knowledge and management experience that typically comes with age. Critics argue that AI strategy requires understanding not just the technology but also regulatory compliance, enterprise sales cycles and organizational change management — areas where younger executives may have limited exposure.
Still, early results suggest the bet is working. Pendo's AI-powered features have contributed to a 25% increase in net revenue retention over the past two quarters, according to the company, as existing customers expanded their use of the platform. The company declined to disclose specific revenue figures but said its AI features now account for more than 30% of new deal value.
The trend extends beyond Pendo. A growing number of software startups are appointing executives in their 20s to lead AI strategy, including several Y Combinator-backed companies that have created "AI-first" leadership roles for recent graduates. Larger enterprises are moving more cautiously, often creating chief AI officer positions at the senior vice president level rather than the C-suite.
For investors, the question is whether early-adopter companies like Pendo can sustain their advantage as larger rivals catch up. Microsoft's Copilot, Salesforce's Einstein and Zoom's AI Companion all represent well-funded competition with existing enterprise relationships. Pendo's bet on youth-driven AI strategy may give it speed, but scale remains the bigger challenge.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.