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Frederick Smith FedEx

#506 Topul Miliardarilor


-#171 in US
-#704 in 2013
#243 Forbes 400
Are o avere de 3.2 miliarde $
Averea neta de-a lungul timpului (fac un grafic) : octombrie 2009 1,65mld$, martie
2010 1,8mld$, sept 2010 1,85mld$, martie 2011 2,1mld$, sept 2011
1,7mld$, martie 2011 2,1mld$, sept 2012-1,8mld$, mart 2013 2,1mld$, sept
2013 2,3mld$, mar 2014-3,2mld$
Chairman and CEO FedEx
Age: 69
Resedinta: Memphis, tn, united states
Casatorit, 10 copii
Frederick Smith founded FedEx in 1971 after he wrote his senior thesis on his vision
for an overnight delivery service and received a poor grade. In recent years the
company has hustled to evolve in the face of declining demand for fast high-priority
shipping. FedEx acquired a stake in African carrier Supaswift in 2013. In November
2013 Smith told reporters he doesn't plan to leave the company he built anytime
soon, despite major buy-ins by activist investors like Dan Loeb. Initially hindered by
a childhood bone disease, Smith regained his health by age 10, excelled at football,
and became a pilot, flying a crop-duster for the Marines during the Vietnam War.
During a rough patch in the early days of FedEx, Smith went to Las Vegas to raise
the funds to keep his young business afloat, succeeding with $27,000 in gambling
winnings.
Detine Washington Redskins.
A absolvit la Yale
http://www.forbes.com/profile/frederick-smith/

10 Lucruri despre Fred Smith


Fred Smiths overnight delivery service was anything but an overnight success. But now hes
worth $2.3 billion, FedEx FDX +0.5% ships more than 10.2 million packages daily in 220
countries, and, while UPS left gift givers stranded this Christmas, Smiths company soared.
Below, 10 things you might know about Smith, the latest prosperous story in our new Path to
Success feature:
2. THE BIG IDEA
Enrolls at Yale in 1962. A disagreement with a professor leads to his developing the business
model for an express EXPR +1.66% delivery service. Decides it will need to carry small,
high-?priority packages at night, when airports arent congested.
4. TAKEOFF
Returns to the idea he developed at Yale and founds Federal Express in 1971 after raising a then
astonishing $91 million in venture capital. Operations start in 1973.
5. A BIG GAMBLE
In his first 26 months in business he racks up $29 million in losses. Desperate to pay bills, he
flies to Las Vegas, wins $27,000 at blackjack and wires it back to FedEx. Yet by 1976 FedEx
is flying smoothly and bringing in $75 million in revenue, though it remains heavily indebted. It
goes public in 1978.
6. TURBULENCE
Looks east to Asia in 1989 with the $880 million purchase of the Flying Tiger cargo line.
Integrating the two is difficult, and FedExs net income drops from $185 million in 1989 to
just $6 million in 1991.
7. PACIFIC OVERTURES
In 1998 introduces the only next-business-day express cargo service from Asia to the U.S. It pays
off. An international priority delivery brings in more than three times as much revenue as a
domestic one.
8. DIVERSIFYING
Buys Kinkos for $2.4 billion in 2004 to compete with UPS recently purchased Mail Boxes Etc.
Kinkos is later reorganized into FedEx Office.

9. THE CRASH
The Great Recession batters FedEx. The company barely ekes out a $98 million profit in
2009, down from $2 billion two years earlier.
10. ALOFT AGAIN
Belt-tightening, international growth and e-commerce help the company surmount the
financial doldrums. Posts a $1.6 billion profit on record-high sales in 2013.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/abrambrown/2014/01/23/10-things-you-might-not-know-aboutfedex-billionaire-fred-smith/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_W._Smith

While attending Yale University, Fred Smith wrote a paper on the need for reliable overnight
delivery in a computerized information age. His professor found the premise improbable, and to
the best of Smith's recollection, he only received a grade of C for this effort, but the idea
remained with him.
After graduation, Smith enlisted in the Marine Corps and served two tours of duty in Vietnam.
As the Yale-educated son of an affluent family, Lt. Smith had some adjustments to make to the
realities of war, but he cherished the advice given him by a veteran Marine sergeant: "There's
only three things you gotta remember: shoot, move and communicate."
While in the military, the young lieutenant observed military procurement and delivery
procedures carefully, with an eye toward someday realizing his dream of a vast network
dedicated to overnight commercial delivery. Smith got his chance when he left the service and
started his express transport business in 1971. "I wanted to do something productive after
blowing so many things up," he told an interviewer.
The young entrepreneur raised $80 million to launch Federal Express, informally known as
FedEx. The delivery service began modestly with small packages and documents. On the first
night of operations, a fleet of 14 jets took off with 186 packages. In the first two years, the
venture lost $27 million. In a short time, the company was on the verge of bankruptcy. It
appeared that Smith had lost all of his investors' money, including the capital of his own brothers
and sisters. But Smith succeeded in renegotiating his bank loans and was able to keep the
company afloat.
Unlike many entrepreneurs, Fred Smith is also a hands-on manager, who directs every facet of
corporate strategy. He determined at the outset that FedEx was in the information business -- that
knowledge about origin, present whereabouts, destination, estimated time of arrival, price and
shipment cost of his cargo was as important as its prompt delivery.

Another principle Smith applied at FedEx was to make sure every employee felt they could share
in the success of the company. FedEx managers are carefully trained to ensure respect for all
employees, and their performance is monitored. Mangers are evaluated annually by both bosses
and workers to ensure good relations between all levels of the company. Smith believes that fair
treatment instills company loyalty, and that company loyalty always pays off.
Smith's professor at Yale may not have seen the need for overnight delivery, but
today's business world depends on businesses like FedEx shipping all manner of
goods around the globe quickly and reliably. Smith's fleet of MD11s and A300s circle
the globe carrying all manner of goods: Maine lobsters, Japanese cherries, Hawaiian
flowers, medicines, heart monitors, contact lenses, surgical scalpels, tennis shoes,
circuit boards, fresh blood, tractor parts, auto bumpers, European fragrances, Swiss
watch parts. As Smith says: "We are the clipper ships of the computer age."

In 1997, Smith acquired the $2.7 billion Caliber System, whose trucking subsidiary RPS ranked
second in ground shipments, exceeded only by UPS, the United Parcel Service. The RPS fleet of
13,500 trucks increased FedEx's profit margin, because ground fleets are cheaper to operate than
airplanes. It also gave FedEx the extra muscle it needed to step into the breach when FedEx
competitor UPS was immobilized by a strike later that year.
Fred Smith's effort to instill company loyalty bore fruit. During the UPS strike, when FedEx was
swamped with 800,000 extra packages a day, thousands of employees, many of whom had
already worked a full day, voluntarily poured into the hubs a little before midnight to sort the
mountain of extra packages. Smith publicly thanked them in 11 full-page newspaper ads; he also
ordered special bonuses.
When the strike was over and the smoke cleared, FedEx had pulled roughly two percentage
points of market share away from UPS, increasing its share of the express transportation market
to more than 43 percent. While UPS faces additional labor unrest among its pilots, FedEx pilots
are among the best-compensated and most contented in the industry. The stock market responded
to FedEx's gains. Over the course of the year, the company's share price rose by nearly 70
percent.
Fred Smith has never allowed FedEx to rest on its laurels. Continuous improvement is one of his
fundamental management principles. in the 1990s, the company installed computer terminals in
the offices of over 100,000 customers and gave proprietary software to more than half a million
more, enabling shippers to label their own packages. Today, more FedEx customers print their
own labels directly from the FedEx web site. FedEx receives electronic notification to pick up
the cargo, then ships and delivers. Competitors in the express delivery business are still rushing
to catch up with FedEx's technological advances.

In 2001, FedEx made an unprecedented deal with the United States Post Office, contracting to
transport large mail shipments for the Post Office, while installing FedEx drop boxes in U.S.
Post Offices. Three years after, FedEx also took on international express shipments for the Post
Office. That same year, FedEx purchased the document services company Kinko's, renaming the
business FedEx Kinko's Office and Print Center. At over 1,000 locations across the United
States, customers can print, copy and bind their documents and dispatch them for overnight
shipping from one convenient location.
Today, FedEx Express is the world's leading express transportation provider. As of 2007, more
than 290,000 FedEx team members worldwide were fielding a fleet of 672 aircraft and 75,000
other vehicles, delivering over 7.5 million packages every business day, to more than 220
countries and territories.
Fred Smith amassed a vast personal fortune by enabling the world of business to deliver its
goods quickly, anywhere in the world. Businesses seeking to reduce the costs of maintaining
large inventory are increasingly adopting "just in time" delivery practices, increasing the demand
for express services like FedEx. The rise of Internet commerce and the growth of the global
economy are also contributing to the company's growth. FedEx has capitalized on both of these
trends, with proprietary software for Internet catalogue service, and the completion of facilities
in the Philippines, Taiwan and France. As of this writing, new hubs are under construction in
Greensboro, North Carolina and in Guangzhou, China. Around the globe, communications and
transport continue to develop along the lines undergraduate Fred Smith predicted in his term
paper over 40 years ago.

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