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T-Mobile names COO Srini Gopalan as next CEO

Mike Sievert moves to vice chairman after leading T-Mobile through the Sprint merger and major acquisitions, while COO Srini Gopalan becomes the new CEO in November 2025.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Sep 22, 2025, 1:26 PM EDT
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T-Mobile CEO Srini Gopalan
Image: T-Mobile
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Mike Sievert — the steady, magenta-clad face of T-Mobile’s post-Sprint era — is handing over the day-to-day reins. In a company announcement on Monday, T-Mobile said Chief Operating Officer Srini Gopalan will become CEO on November 1, 2025, while Sievert will move to a newly created role as vice chairman and remain on the board. The change, the company said, is the result of long-running succession planning and is designed to keep the carrier’s “Un-carrier” momentum going.

If that sounds sudden, that’s because it feels a little like that from the outside. Sievert has led T-Mobile since April 2020 — stepping into the top job the same day the company closed its blockbuster Sprint merger — and has overseen a period of rapid growth, spectrum gains and acquisitive moves that remade the U.S. wireless landscape in T-Mobile’s favor. The company’s board framed the change as a predictable next chapter rather than an emergency exit: Sievert will advise on long-term strategy, talent and external relations while Gopalan runs the business.

Why now? Succession, strategy and smoothing the handoff

Company communications stress the word “succession.” Sievert and the board say this transition is the product of a deliberate, multi-year plan to prepare the company for whatever comes next — competition, new technologies and more moves into home internet and fiber. Gopalan, who joined T-Mobile’s executive ranks earlier this year as COO, has deep international telecom experience and years on Deutsche Telekom’s boards; the board’s bet is that his mix of operational chops and global perspective will help push T-Mobile from being largely a network and wireless company into a broader, data-driven connectivity player.

Gopalan himself framed the moment that way in the release: he says T-Mobile is headed toward being “the most data-driven, AI-enabled, digital-first company in the industry,” and that the culture and brand the company has built leave it well positioned to compete. That language — about AI, digital transformation and data — is telling. It signals that the next leadership chapter will be as much about software, analytics and customer digital journeys as it is about towers and airwaves.

The pile of deals behind the podium

Sievert’s tenure has been defined by growth and deals. Under his watch, T-Mobile closed the Sprint merger that supplied crucial mid-band spectrum for 5G. The company later moved to fold in prepaid brands and scale its retail footprint: notable among acquisitions was Mint Mobile (the D2C prepaid brand with public ties to Ryan Reynolds), which T-Mobile announced and then integrated into its consumer portfolio. More recently, T-Mobile agreed to acquire UScellular’s wireless operations — a deal that transferred customers, stores and spectrum to T-Mobile as the smaller carrier reshaped itself — giving T-Mobile both scale and rural footprint. Those transactions helped change T-Mobile’s posture from scrappy challenger to national heavyweight.

A controversial bit of housekeeping

This year, T-Mobile also made a fraught regulatory and corporate-culture move: the company paused or rolled back certain diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs as it pursued FCC approvals tied to other strategic moves. The decision drew scrutiny from employees and observers who saw it as a trade-off between regulatory convenience and workplace commitments. That episode is part of the broader backdrop for any leadership change — it’s one of the issues the incoming CEO will inherit.

Who is Srini Gopalan — and what might change?

Gopalan arrives with a resume that reads like a telecom tour: executive roles at Vodafone and Bharti Airtel, years as a board member at Deutsche Telekom, and stints running operations in markets that look very different from the U.S. market. He’s been positioned internally as someone who can operationalize scale and bring a global playbook to T-Mobile’s ambitions in fiber, broadband and digital services. Market reaction to the news was muted but real — T-Mobile’s shares slipped modestly in early trading — a reminder that investors want clarity not just on leadership but on how the company will grow from here.

What to watch next

Transitions are a moment for both reassurance and recalibration. Watch the next few quarters for:

  • How Gopalan articulates growth priorities (fiber expansion? more MVNO brands? international partnerships?).
  • Any changes to governance or public commitments on culture and DEI after this year’s controversy?
  • Execution on the UScellular and Mint integrations, and whether T-Mobile accelerates further consolidation or pivots to deeper digital products.

For now, the handoff reads like a classic corporate next-chapter pitch: a long-time CEO steps into a strategy role, a seasoned operator takes over day-to-day, and the company leans into its playbook of customer-centric marketing, network investment and acquisitive scale. Whether that old playbook — updated with AI and data talk — is enough to keep T-Mobile ahead of AT&T, Verizon and a field of smaller challengers is the real story Gopalan will need to write.


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