CrowdStrike’s President Accepted an Award for the ‘Most Epic Fail’ — It’s a Great Lesson in Leadership (and Humility)

A faulty CrowdStrike update in July affected 8.5 million Windows devices around the world.

By Sherin Shibu | edited by Melissa Malamut | Aug 12, 2024
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Key Takeaways

  • CrowdStrike accepted an award on Saturday for the “most epic fail” — and the company’s president was on stage to accept it.
  • “Definitely not the award to be proud of receiving,” CrowdStrike President Michael Sentonas said.
  • CrowdStrike has already been sued by its shareholders and air travelers after its July 19 global incident.

After a single CrowdStrike update caused the largest IT outage in history last month, rippling across , affecting , and causing , the last thing you’d expect is for the company to start receiving awards.

But on Saturday, CrowdStrike accepted a large, two-tiered trophy at the annual Pwnie Awards in Las Vegas — for the “most epic fail.” Even more surprising? CrowdStrike President Michael Sentonas accepted the award in person.

“Definitely not the award to be proud of receiving,” he said when accepting the award. “I think the team was surprised when I said straightaway that I would come and get it because we got this horribly wrong.”

Sentonas said he wanted to bring the trophy back to CrowdStrike headquarters in Austin, Texas, so every CrowdStrike employee would see it and learn from the incident.

“From that perspective, I will say thank you and take the trophy,” Setonas said. “We’ll put it in the right place and make sure everybody sees it.”

Though Sentonas accepted the award graciously, CrowdStrike’s July 19 incident was more than a learning experience.

The outage was caused by a bug in a software update, which caused the on Microsoft Windows devices. The update over 10,000 flights, resulted in scheduled surgeries, disrupted , and impacted other operations across the globe.

It also may have cost Fortune 500 companies around in damages. Delta wrote in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing last week that the outage affected , one day after some of those customers over how the airline handled canceled flights.

CrowdStrike was also last week in a class action. CrowdStrike’s shareholders additionally earlier this month after the company’s share price dropped 32% in the 12 days after the outage.

Related: The Largest IT Outage in History Took Place on Friday Due to a Crowdstrike Update. Here’s How the CEO Is Responding.

Key Takeaways

  • CrowdStrike accepted an award on Saturday for the “most epic fail” — and the company’s president was on stage to accept it.
  • “Definitely not the award to be proud of receiving,” CrowdStrike President Michael Sentonas said.
  • CrowdStrike has already been sued by its shareholders and air travelers after its July 19 global incident.

After a single CrowdStrike update caused the largest IT outage in history last month, rippling across , affecting , and causing , the last thing you’d expect is for the company to start receiving awards.

But on Saturday, CrowdStrike accepted a large, two-tiered trophy at the annual Pwnie Awards in Las Vegas — for the “most epic fail.” Even more surprising? CrowdStrike President Michael Sentonas accepted the award in person.

“Definitely not the award to be proud of receiving,” he said when accepting the award. “I think the team was surprised when I said straightaway that I would come and get it because we got this horribly wrong.”

Sherin Shibu • News Reporter

Âé¶¹Éç Staff
Sherin Shibu is a business news reporter at Âé¶¹Éç.com. She previously worked for PCMag, Business... Read more
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