0/ A Redditor digs into the career of AMC's CEO Adam Aron @CEOAdam, who has an impressive track record of turning companies around (it's also a hysterically-written business bio).
Here's the story 🧵
1/ Quick summary of 66-year old Aron's career:
◻️ Harvard BA / MBA
◻️ Marketing @ Hyatt and United Airlines
◻️ CEO, Norwegian Cruises
◻️ CEO, Vail Resorts
◻️ CEO and part-owner, Philadelphia 76ers
◻️ CEO, Starwood Hotels
◻️ CEO, AMC
2/ Early years as an exceptional student (many references to 'silverback apes'...funniest parts are *bolded*)
3/ The start of a career in 'fun' industries: Pan Am (1979-85), variety of marketing positions; Western Airlines (1985-87) as VP of Marketing; Hyatt Hotels & Resorts (1987-90) as SVP of Marketing; United Airlines (1990-93) as SVP of Marketing
4/ First-time CEO. First company in debt. President and CEO of Norwegian Cruise Line (1993-96):
5/ Vail Resorts as Chairman and CEO (1996-2006):
6/ Turning around 76ers attendance and striking a $12B M&A deal with Starwood Hotels (2006-2015):
7/ AMC Entertainment (2015 - present)
8/ Hilariously, the Redditor briefly changed Aron's Wikipedia profile to a more Reddit-friendly corporate profile
9/ In sum:
10/ In the recent AMC stock run, Aron has ingratiated himself with Reddit investors:
◻️ He said individual investors own 80% of AMC and he "works for them"
◻️ He donated $100k to the WSB-supported Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund
◻️ Perks program (eg. free popcorn) for investors
11/ AMC is also turning its sky-high stock into cash: In June, it issued millions of shares and raised $800m+ to:
◻️ help pay down a $5B+ debt load
◻️ acquire *more* theatre assets + refurbish existing ones
(Whether this is a prudent move is entirely another question)
12/ AMC is betting that post-COVID will be boom times for theatres.
There are serious headwinds to that thesis but @CEOAdam has a track record (Norwegian, Vail, 76ers, Starwood) of corporate miracles.
Boston Consulting Group (BCG) trained an AI slideshow maker called “Decker” on 900 templates and apparently gotten so popular that “some of its consultants are fretting about job security.”
Sorry, called “Deckster”. That excerpt was from this BI piece that also looked at McKinsey and Deloitte AI uses: businessinsider.com/consulting-ai-…
The Mckinsey chatbot is used by 70% of firm but same anonymous job board said it’s "functional enough" and best for "very low stakes issues." x.com/bearlyai/statu…
Here’s a r/consulting thread based on Computer World last year. Deckster was launched internally March 2024…some think it’s BS…some think it helps with cold start (B- quality): reddit.com/r/consulting/s…
never forget that episode of “Nathan For You” when he launched a fire detector product and tried to avoid import tariffs by turning it into a music device
One company that has been very good at navigating international food tariffs/regulations is Trader Joe’s. Built its dairy and wine businesses by finding workarounds.
If you are the person that did the un-aligned letters for the previous eBay logo, please contact the research app team. We are huge fans of how un-aligned the “e” is with the “y”.Bearly.AI
This article offers up reasons for popularity of simple font logos (mostly Sans Serif):
— Easier to standardize ads across mediums
— Improves readability (especially on mobile)
— The “brand” matters more than the logo velvetshark.com/why-do-brands-…