Carrie inherits this role as CEO and I think everyone sort of feels like, okay, Baul's in her court, she needs to really execute for this company well. But also, at the end of the day, like, Open Door has a method, it has pricing, it has operations, it has sales, it has products, et cetera, like Carrie understands all of that. And all of that has sort of been solved for, especially since Eric, Eric wasn't really managing all of that day to day anyways, right? Like Andrew Loakey was as president.
And so I would say, Carrie's job fundamentally right now is to be ruthless about capital and to be efficient. And that's like a money problem that she's solving. But what they've effectively done by moving Eric from CEO to president of Marketplace, they're kind of unleashing him. You know what I mean? They're kind of unleashing him and in this qualified way where they say, you have been, you have been replaced at CEO at the worst time for your baby, for your company that's been that you've been building and losing sleep over for eight years.
And you've been moved to to a different role, right? Now you're not even the CEO of your own company anymore, but you are going to be president of the most important product and quite possibly will save the life of that company. And I think eliminating some of those blockades for him, eliminating some of that inertia that surrounded probably his day-to-day life as a CEO, I have to imagine for someone like Eric who has discussed being sort of misvalued himself for a long time as someone who feels like he's been the underdog in a lot of different circumstances, that's fuel for people like that.
That's like, that's endless. I'll turn to fuel for people like that. And so if Eric can tap into that, if Eric can kind of come to work every day, reinvigorated about building this product and saving his company, I think he really has the hardest job in the company now. He has to create a product that doesn't exist and he has to make it 30% of OpenDore's business, which is already at significant scale.
I mean, he's the one who really has the job to lose in the situation. And he really has the most interesting part of the of OpenDore's future business.