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Wendell Weeks

Wendell Weeks
Born
Wendell P. Weeks

1959 or 1960 (age 64–65)[1]
NationalityAmerican
EducationLehigh University (BS)
Harvard University (MBA)
OccupationBusinessman
TitleChairman, CEO, and president, Corning Inc.
TermApril 2007-
SpouseKim Frock
Children2

Wendell P. Weeks (born 1959/60) is an American businessman, the chairman, CEO, and president of Corning Inc.

Education

Weeks received a bachelor's degree in accounting and finance from Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in 1981, and an MBA from Harvard Business School in 1987.[1][2]

Career

Corning

Weeks joined Corning in 1983. He held a variety of financial, business development, commercial, and general management roles, including strategic positions in the company's television, specialty glass, and optical communications businesses.

In 1996, Weeks was named vice president and general manager of Corning's optical fiber business, a tenure which included managing through a major sales downturn.[3]

Weeks has been a director of Corning since December 2000.

He was promoted to chief executive officer in April 2005. A notable action was rapid movement into production of Gorilla Glass, for the new iPhone.[4][5]

He became chairman in April 2007.[6][1]

In 2023, Weeks's total compensation from Corning was $15.6 million, or 370 times the median employee pay at Corning for that year.[7]

Non-executive roles

Weeks is a member of the national Business Roundtable[8][9] and has been a member of the board of directors of Amazon.com since February 2016.[1]

Business philosophy

Weeks has said that "If you’re going to sustain as an institution, you have to focus on problems that matter. For Corning, some of those things are cleaner air; safer, more effective medicines; and fast, reliable communication. A company’s value is ultimately measured by whether or not it does good in society." He believes that creative destruction is an important part of capitalism, but so is collaboration.[10] He regards failures as opportunities to learn.[11]

Personal life

Weeks met his wife, Kim Frock, at Harvard Business School.[10] She worked at Corning and helped initiate and volunteered with a local school project. They have two children.[12]

References