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Zynga Touts New Leadership and Mobile Growth

With former CEO Mark Pincus now out of an operational role, new CEO Don Mattrick has added some new key hires.

Effie Y. / Flickr

Still in the middle of its social to mobile transition, Zynga announced the completion of a leadership shuffle that began with the appointment of former Xbox executive Don Mattrick as CEO last year.

Former CEO Mark Pincus, who had been serving as chief product officer under Mattrick, has stepped down from that role but will remain chairman of Zynga’s board.

The leadership announcement came as the online gaming company reported a net loss, excluding items, of a penny a share, matching Wall Street expectations. The company reported better-than-expected bookings of $161 million, beating analyst expectations of $146.5 million. Total revenue fell 36 percent year over year to $168 million.

Zynga shares are trading up four percent after hours, at $4.61 per share as of the time of this writing.

Alex Garden, currently the general manager of Xbox Music, Video and Reading at Microsoft, will become the first president of Zynga Studios, a new role reporting to Mattrick, on May 5. Garden will oversee all games developed at Zynga except NaturalMotion’s titles, which will remain under that company’s CEO Torsten Reil.

Reporting to Garden will be another new hire, Chief Visual Officer Henry LaBounta, who started two weeks ago. LaBounta previously worked with Mattrick on the Need for Speed franchise at EA, and has experience in CGI, movies and television by way of a six-year stint at DreamWorks.

In its last new hire, Jennifer Nuckles, Zynga is also getting a chief marketing officer for the first time since the resignation of former CMO Jeff Karp in 2012. Nuckles started last week and will oversee attempts to go beyond Zynga’s current marketing initiatives, banner and interstitial app ads.

Following January’s acquisition of NaturalMotion for $527 million, the company’s monthly mobile audience grew 45 percent, but even excluding NaturalMotion’s hit games like CSR Racing and Clumsy Ninja, mobile users were up 11 percent quarter over quarter. At GDC last month, Mattrick said the company’s mobile turnaround is halfway there, and it’s likely that transition will be the central focus of the company’s call with investors at 2 pm PT.

Correction: An earlier version of this story erroneously stated Zynga reported a miss on earnings per share.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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