戴夫·克拉克表示,在加入Flexport不到一年后将辞去首席执行官一职,因为他的前任,也是该公司的创始人改变了想法。
去年夏天,在电商行业经历了辉煌的20年后,克拉克在竞争中不敌亚马逊(Amazon)旗下的亚马逊云科技(Amazon Web Services)的首席执行官安迪·贾西,从亚马逊离职。2022年9月,他加入Flexport担任联合首席执行官。当时一份宣布该任命消息的新闻稿称克拉克是“全世界最优秀的大公司经营者之一”,而Flexport的创始人瑞安·彼得森告诉媒体Geekwire,克拉克将“带领Flexport踏上最激动人心的旅程”。
然而看起来,现在彼得森将独自带领公司前进。“创始人有权改变想法。”克拉克于9月6日在X [原推特(Twitter)平台]上写道。他补充道,回到公司是为了“带公司更进一步”,努力实现颠覆物流业的愿景。据他暗示,公司将回归基本业务。
克拉克说:“今天,瑞安和我讨论希望将重心调整至核心货运业务增长。有鉴于此,我认为他更适合领导公司朝这一方向发展。因此,我将辞去在Flexport的职务。”
Freightwaves是第一个报道克拉克突然被公司董事会解雇的公司。《信息报》(The Information)进一步报道称,彼得森和董事会成员罗伯特·斯旺在9月6日告诉克拉克,他要么辞职,要么在第二天被解雇。克拉克几乎向《信息报》证实了自己的解雇,他告诉新闻媒体:“瑞安觉得他是领导公司前进的最佳人选,我同意他的看法。”
在一份确认领导层变动的声明里,公司发言人于9月6日告诉《财富》杂志,“瑞安和董事会其他成员都很感谢过去一年戴夫·克拉克的领导。目前Flexport无法就此事分享更多内容。”
这已经是克拉克第二次高调离职。他曾经长期担任物流领域高管,职业生涯大部分时间都在亚马逊。他在亚马逊时声名鹊起,负责领导亚马逊全球消费者业务。克拉克坚定支持公司立场,在《佛蒙特独立报》(Vermont Independent)表示支持亚马逊阿拉巴马州贝塞默仓库的工会活动后,他曾经与进步派参议员伯尼·桑德斯争吵,也曾经亲自到访该仓库。(最终员工拒绝加入工会。)
“我经常说我们是雇主中的伯尼·桑德斯,但并不完全正确,因为实际上我们为选民提供了开明的工作场所:最低工资15美元、入职第一天就有医保、提供职业发展机会,以及安全和包容的工作环境。”2021年,克拉克在接受媒体Business Insider的采访时表示。
“所以,如果你想听人谈时薪15美元和医保,就可以去市中心听参议员桑德斯演讲。但如果想时薪至少15美元并拥有完善的医保,亚马逊正在招聘。”他说。
克拉克在推特(现改名为X)上也积极为亚马逊辩护,曾经猛烈回击批评该公司的政客(以及喜剧演员约翰·奥利弗)。2020年,斯塔滕岛亚马逊仓库的员工开始加入工会时,Vice报道称克拉克曾经参与抹黑其中一名组织者,然而最终失败,文中称他“不聪明,要么就是表述不清”。
在亚马逊,经常有人提起克拉克可能接替创始人杰夫·贝佐斯。但最终安迪·贾西(此前负责马逊的云部门)胜出。离职一年前,克拉克从亚马逊的西雅图总部搬到休斯顿,辞职后曾经向《福布斯》(Forbes)表示“快乐得有点超出想象”,还称渴望去一家较小的公司担任首席执行官。
现在他的目标可能是更高层的领导:《华尔街日报》(Wall Street Journal)称,克拉克正在考虑竞选美国得克萨斯州的州长,还聘请了政治顾问。(财富中文网)
译者:冯丰
审校:夏林
戴夫·克拉克表示,在加入Flexport不到一年后将辞去首席执行官一职,因为他的前任,也是该公司的创始人改变了想法。
去年夏天,在电商行业经历了辉煌的20年后,克拉克在竞争中不敌亚马逊(Amazon)旗下的亚马逊云科技(Amazon Web Services)的首席执行官安迪·贾西,从亚马逊离职。2022年9月,他加入Flexport担任联合首席执行官。当时一份宣布该任命消息的新闻稿称克拉克是“全世界最优秀的大公司经营者之一”,而Flexport的创始人瑞安·彼得森告诉媒体Geekwire,克拉克将“带领Flexport踏上最激动人心的旅程”。
然而看起来,现在彼得森将独自带领公司前进。“创始人有权改变想法。”克拉克于9月6日在X [原推特(Twitter)平台]上写道。他补充道,回到公司是为了“带公司更进一步”,努力实现颠覆物流业的愿景。据他暗示,公司将回归基本业务。
克拉克说:“今天,瑞安和我讨论希望将重心调整至核心货运业务增长。有鉴于此,我认为他更适合领导公司朝这一方向发展。因此,我将辞去在Flexport的职务。”
Freightwaves是第一个报道克拉克突然被公司董事会解雇的公司。《信息报》(The Information)进一步报道称,彼得森和董事会成员罗伯特·斯旺在9月6日告诉克拉克,他要么辞职,要么在第二天被解雇。克拉克几乎向《信息报》证实了自己的解雇,他告诉新闻媒体:“瑞安觉得他是领导公司前进的最佳人选,我同意他的看法。”
在一份确认领导层变动的声明里,公司发言人于9月6日告诉《财富》杂志,“瑞安和董事会其他成员都很感谢过去一年戴夫·克拉克的领导。目前Flexport无法就此事分享更多内容。”
这已经是克拉克第二次高调离职。他曾经长期担任物流领域高管,职业生涯大部分时间都在亚马逊。他在亚马逊时声名鹊起,负责领导亚马逊全球消费者业务。克拉克坚定支持公司立场,在《佛蒙特独立报》(Vermont Independent)表示支持亚马逊阿拉巴马州贝塞默仓库的工会活动后,他曾经与进步派参议员伯尼·桑德斯争吵,也曾经亲自到访该仓库。(最终员工拒绝加入工会。)
“我经常说我们是雇主中的伯尼·桑德斯,但并不完全正确,因为实际上我们为选民提供了开明的工作场所:最低工资15美元、入职第一天就有医保、提供职业发展机会,以及安全和包容的工作环境。”2021年,克拉克在接受媒体Business Insider的采访时表示。
“所以,如果你想听人谈时薪15美元和医保,就可以去市中心听参议员桑德斯演讲。但如果想时薪至少15美元并拥有完善的医保,亚马逊正在招聘。”他说。
克拉克在推特(现改名为X)上也积极为亚马逊辩护,曾经猛烈回击批评该公司的政客(以及喜剧演员约翰·奥利弗)。2020年,斯塔滕岛亚马逊仓库的员工开始加入工会时,Vice报道称克拉克曾经参与抹黑其中一名组织者,然而最终失败,文中称他“不聪明,要么就是表述不清”。
在亚马逊,经常有人提起克拉克可能接替创始人杰夫·贝佐斯。但最终安迪·贾西(此前负责马逊的云部门)胜出。离职一年前,克拉克从亚马逊的西雅图总部搬到休斯顿,辞职后曾经向《福布斯》(Forbes)表示“快乐得有点超出想象”,还称渴望去一家较小的公司担任首席执行官。
现在他的目标可能是更高层的领导:《华尔街日报》(Wall Street Journal)称,克拉克正在考虑竞选美国得克萨斯州的州长,还聘请了政治顾问。(财富中文网)
译者:冯丰
审校:夏林
Dave Clark is leaving as CEO of Flexport less than a year after joining the company, and it’s because his predecessor, the company’s founder, changed his mind.
Clark, who left Amazon last summer after a starry two-decade career at the e-retailer after losing a bake-off to former Amazon Web Services chief Andy Jassy, joined Flexport in September of 2022 as co-CEO. A company press release from last summer announcing Clark’s appointment called him “one of the world’s best operators at scale,” while Flexport founder Ryan Petersen told Geekwire that Clark would “shepherd Flexport into the most exciting phase of our journey.”
Now, however, it looks like Petersen will be leading the flock alone. “Founders have the right to change their minds,” Clark wrote on X (formerly Twitter) on September 6, adding that he had been brought in to “take the company to the next level” and deliver on a vision of disrupting the logistics industry. Instead, it’s a back-to-basics move, he suggested.
“Today, Ryan and I discussed his desire to return to focusing on growth in the core freight business,” he said. “In light of that, I feel that he is best suited to lead the company in that direction. As such, I will be resigning from my position at Flexport.”
Freightwaves was first to report that Clark was fired—abruptly—by the company’s board. The Information further reported that Petersen and Robert Swan, a board member, told Clark on September 6 that he could either resign or be fired the following day. Clark all but confirmed his termination to The Information, telling the news outlet that “Ryan felt he was the best person to lead the company forward, and I agreed with him.”
In a statement confirming the change of leadership, a company spokesperson told Fortune on September 6, “Ryan and the rest of the board thank Dave Clark for his leadership over the past year. Flexport has nothing further to share on this matter at this time.”
It’s the second high-profile departure for Clark, a veteran logistics executive who spent most of his career at Amazon, where he made his name and rose to lead its worldwide consumer business. A staunch defender of the company, Clark famously locked horns with progressive senator Bernie Sanders after the Vermont Independent expressed support for a union drive at Amazon’s Bessemer, Alabama warehouse, including an in-person visit. (The workers ultimately rejected unionizing.)
“I often say we are the Bernie Sanders of employers, but that’s not quite right because we actually deliver a progressive workplace for our constituents: a $15 minimum wage, health care from day one, career progression, and a safe and inclusive work environment,” Clark told Insider in 2021.
“So if you want to hear about $15 an hour and health care, Senator Sanders will be speaking downtown. But if you would like to make at least $15 an hour and have good health care, Amazon is hiring,” he said.
Clark was also a vocal defender of Amazon on Twitter (now X), lashing out at politicians (and comedian John Oliver) who criticized the company. In 2020, when workers at an Amazon warehouse in Staten Island moved to unionize, Vice reported that Clark was involved in a failed campaign to smear one of the organizers, including by painting him as “not smart or articulate.”
At Amazon, Clark was often named as a possible successor to founder Jeff Bezos. But he was ultimately passed over for Andy Jassy, who had led Amazon’s cloud division before ascending to the top spot. Clark moved from Amazon’s Seattle headquarters to Houston the year before leaving, and upon his resignation told Forbes that he had “outgrown my joy a little bit” and was yearning for a stint as CEO at a smaller company.
He could now be eyeing an even bigger scale of leadership: The Wall Street Journal reported that he is considering running for governor of Texas and has hired political consultants for that goal.