Today · Apr 21, 2026
Two Ski Industry CEOs Gone in a Year. That's Not Coincidence. That's a Pattern.

Two Ski Industry CEOs Gone in a Year. That's Not Coincidence. That's a Pattern.

Alterra's CEO exits less than four years in, the second abrupt departure atop a major ski company in twelve months. When private equity quietly replaces the person who just spent $2 billion of their money, the interesting question isn't why... it's what comes next for the resorts and the people running them.

I watched a GM get fired once after the best year the property ever had. Seriously. RevPAR up 14%, guest sat scores through the roof, staff retention the best in the region. He got let go on a Tuesday morning. The ownership group had decided the asset needed "different leadership for the next phase of growth." That's a phrase that means absolutely nothing and absolutely everything at the same time. The GM understood exactly what happened. The hotel had been repositioned, the value had been created, and now the owners wanted someone who would run it like the asset it had become rather than the turnaround it used to be. He wasn't doing anything wrong. The job had changed underneath him.

That's what I see when I look at Alterra Mountain Company right now. Jared Smith came in, spent over $2 billion on capital improvements, pushed a $400 million expansion at one of their marquee properties, added three new resorts to the portfolio, grew the Ikon Pass partner network by 37 destinations, and then... got shown the door at the end of ski season. The official language is all handshakes and gratitude. Eric Resnick, who runs KSL Capital Partners (the PE firm that co-owns Alterra with Henry Crown & Company), thanked Smith for "continued growth and operational advancement." Smith called it an "honor." Everyone's smiling. Nobody's explaining. And the board has moved to an "Office of the CEO" structure with ownership representatives and a former CEO running day-to-day operations. When ownership takes direct operational control, that's not a transition plan. That's owners who've decided they know better. Maybe they do. But the people managing those 20 resorts just woke up to a very different reporting structure than they had last week.

Here's what makes this worth paying attention to even if you've never managed a ski resort in your life. This is the second time in less than a year that a major consolidated ski company has abruptly replaced its CEO. Vail Resorts did the same thing last May. Two companies control an enormous percentage of destination ski in North America. Both just changed leadership under circumstances that suggest the PE and investment groups behind them are unsatisfied with something... and neither company is saying what. Meanwhile, both companies are facing a class-action lawsuit filed just days ago alleging they've been inflating daily lift ticket prices to force consumers into expensive multi-mountain passes. That's the backdrop. Leadership instability, legal exposure, and a pricing strategy that's drawing fire from the people who are supposed to be the customers.

If you're running a resort property (ski or otherwise) that relies on a pass product or loyalty program controlled by someone three levels above you, this is worth studying. The capital investment phase at Alterra was aggressive... $2 billion in improvements, massive terrain expansion, acquisition after acquisition. That phase appears to be over, or at least entering a different gear. When PE ownership takes the wheel back from the operating CEO, the next phase is almost always about returns, not reinvestment. That means tighter operating budgets. That means every resort GM in that portfolio should be looking at their cost structure right now, not waiting for the new CEO (whoever that turns out to be) to tell them what's changing. The people who survive leadership transitions are the ones who already have their house in order before the new boss walks in.

The Ikon Pass just went up about 5% for next season. The expansion spending has been historic. The CEO who oversaw all of it is gone. And ownership is running the show directly. I've seen this movie before. The credits are rolling on the growth chapter. What comes next is the efficiency chapter. And efficiency chapters are where the people on the ground feel it first.

Operator's Take

If you're a resort GM or department head inside a portfolio that just changed leadership... or is about to... don't wait for the memo. Pull your current operating budget and identify every line item that was built for a growth phase. Training programs, staffing models designed for expansion, capital project timelines that haven't been approved yet. Get realistic about which of those survive a pivot toward returns. The smartest move you can make right now is to walk into your next review with two budgets: one that assumes the current trajectory, and one that assumes a 10-15% tightening on discretionary spend. When the new leadership arrives (and it will, because "Office of the CEO" is a holding pattern, not a strategy), the GM who already has the efficiency plan ready is the one who keeps their job. The one who's still waiting to be told what to do is the one who gets the Tuesday morning meeting.

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Source: Google News: Resort Hotels
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