Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ron Johnson (born October 15, 1959) is the CEO and founder of Enjoy Technology. Previously, he was CEO of JCPenney, where he led a failed effort to fundamentally reshape the retailer; senior vice president of retail operations at Apple Inc., where he developed the concept of the Apple Retail Stores and the Genius Bar; and the vice president of merchandising for Target Corporation, where he was ...
During his career, he led Macy's and was the chairman and CEO of J. C. Penney. [1] [2] Ullman served as Penney's CEO twice: first from December 2004 through October 2011, when he was succeeded by Ron Johnson, and then again after Johnson's departure, from April 2013 through July 2015 when Ullman stepped down. [3] [4]
Michael Ainsworth/Dallas Morning News/MCTJ.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson shows off a bread-shaped Michael Graves toaster at a Penney location in Dallas, Texas, in February. Ron Johnson finally stepped ...
Last week, he sent a letter to the board urging it to speed up it search for a new CEO; the board fired back, calling his efforts "disruptive and counterproductive" and calling Ullman "the right ...
Based on all the quarterly earnings results of J.C. Penney Co. Inc. (NYSE: JCP) since bumbler Ron Johnson took over as chief executive officer, he should have been fired long ago. There is one ...
Google reduced the company's visibility, and JCPenney fired its search engine consultant. [38] In June 2011, Ron Johnson, former head of Apple's retail division, became JCPenney's CEO. [39] That same year, the company sold its 15 remaining catalog outlets to SB Capital Group, converting them into JC's 5 Star Outlets. [40]
Ron Johnson, who was named CEO of J.C. Penney in November 2011, has stepped down from his post with the struggling retailer and been replaced by former CEO Myron E. "Mike" Ullman III. J.C. Penney ...
On October 15, 2018, Soltau began as CEO [10] and a member of the board of JCPenney following Marvin Ellison's departure and the decline of the struggling company. [8] [11] She was the 25th woman leading a Fortune 500 company at the time, Penney's fifth chief executive in the past decade and first woman executive.