Thomas Middelhoff | |
---|---|
Born | Thomas Middelhoff May 11, 1953 [1] |
Nationality | German |
Alma mater | University of Münster (PhD) |
Occupation(s) | Business executive, consultant |
Employer(s) | Formerly Bertelsmann and Investcorp |
Known for | Member of the Executive Board and Chief Executive Officer of Bertelsmann between 1998 and 2002 |
Spouses | Cornelie Middelhoff (divorced)Deborah Gottlieb (m. 2021) |
Children | 5 |
Thomas Middelhoff (born 11 May 1953 [1] ) is a German corporate manager. From 1994 to 1998, he was a member of the Executive Board of Bertelsmann AG, until he then served as CEO of the Bertelsmann media group from November 1998 to July 2002. [2] In 2002, he was Head of Corporate Investments in Europe for Investcorp International Ltd until May 2005. [2] From May 2005 to February 2009, Middelhoff then took over as Chairman of the Board of Management of the retail group Arcandor (previously KarstadtQuelle). [3] After Arcandor, Thomas Middelhoff founded the investment company BLM (Berger Lahnstein Middelhoff & Partners LLP) in London with Roland Berger and Florian Lahnstein. [4] [5] The spin-off Pulse Capital Partners LLC emerged from this company.
Middelhoff grew up as the third of five children in a Catholic family in Düsseldorf and Ratingen. His father worked as a sales representative in his uncle's textile factory. He studied business at the University of Münster and received his doctorate at the Institute for Marketing under the supervision of Heribert Meffert. While at university, he was already working in his father's textile business. After graduating he was given a high post in the company. He received his doctorate in 1987 from Bruno Tietz at the University of Saarbrücken with a thesis on the integrated planning of communication systems: illustrated by the introduction of Btx in retail-oriented branch systems and cooperative groups.
In 1986 he moved to Bertelsmann, a multinational media corporation based in Germany, as assistant manager of the graphic firm in Gütersloh. A year later he became managing director of the subsidiary Elsnerdruck in Berlin, and in 1989 managing director of Mohndruck. In 1990, he became a member of the board of directors of Bertelsmann. In 1994 he was appointed to the Executive Board of Bertelsmann AG and took over management of corporate development and coordination of the multimedia business, where he was responsible for the strategic realignment of the group in the field of electronic entertainment. [6]
Middelhoff recognized the potential of the new digital media early. He made small investments into the company Pixelpark in Berlin among others, on Bertelsmann's behalf. This was followed by further investments in Lycos and Mediaways. As an early believer in the rapid development of the Internet, he suggested a large financial participation of Bertelsmann in America Online (AOL) when it was still a young company, and created the joint venture AOL Europe, with a financial holding of $50 million for a 5% stake. [7] This investment was extremely successful and would later influence Middelhoff's ascent in the company to CEO and chairman of the board. In May 1995, he became a member of the governing board of AOL, and during his time in this position Middelhoff became a "close friend" of AOL's founder, Steve Case. In 1995, Bertelsmann and AOL started the joint venture AOL Germany.
From November 1998 to July 2002, Middelhoff was the CEO of Bertelsmann. During this time he built up the RTL Group, today the largest operator of advertising-financed commercial television and radio in Europe. He expanded the book division into the world market leader by purchasing Random House and intensified the company's Internet activities by starting the online media portal BOL (Bertelsmann Online), which was sold to Buch.de Internetstores in 2002. In addition, he was responsible for a planned joint venture with Amazon, which did not receive the approval of the majority on Bertelsmann's Executive Board. [8] But Bertelsmann soon stepped back from these online engagements, selling its shares of AOL-Europe back to Time Warner and sold the 50% stake for 7.6 billion euros in cash, [9] which had merged with AOL in 2001.
Besides his position at the Bertelsmann group, Middelhoff has also been a member of the Board of Trustees of the non-profit Bertelsmann Stiftung, too (2000–2002). [10]
Beginning in 2003, Middelhoff coordinated the European affairs of the holding company Investcorp. The German businesses of the corporation included Gerresheimer Glas and Callahan. After APCOA Parking was taken over by Investcorp in 2004, he was appointed to its supervisory board.
Since 2003 Middelhoff has also been a member of the board of The New York Times Company responsible for the compensation committee. As a confidant of Madeleine Schickedanz, he became the chairman of KarstadtQuelle AG's supervisory board in June 2004 and its CEO in May 2005. KarstadtQuelle was renamed Arcandor in 2007.
Middelhoff pushed through the renaming of KarstadtQuelle as Arcandor and divided the operational business into the three core areas of department store (Karstadt), mail order (Primondo) and tourism (Thomas Cook). When he joined the company, the share price was 7.60 euros and peaked in 2007 at around 29 euros. [11] Due to the expansion of the tourism business, sales rose to 21 billion euros in 2007 and equity grew. Since 2007, Middelhoff was Chairman of the Supervisory Board of the Thomas Cook Group, the world's second largest tourism company, in which Arcandor held 52% of the shares.
Middelhoff was removed from his position as CEO of Arcandor and Thomas Cook Group in March 2009. In May 2009, Arcandor had to ask for government guarantees and loans. On the same day, it became known that the responsible public prosecutor's office had opened a preliminary investigation into Middelhoff's personal involvement in the Oppenheim-Esch Fund, this going back to the suggestion of the then Federal Minister of Justice Brigitte Zypries (SPD), with a corresponding letter & request to former counterpart Roswitha Müller-Piepenkötter (CDU) to intervene, which was then discontinued years later. [12] Arcandor declared bankruptcy in the following week. [13] In 2014, Middelhoff was convicted on criminal charges related to his activities while head of Arcandor; he was sentenced to three years' imprisonment. [14] [15] Middlehoff served 3 years in prison for Arcandor-related crimes. He separated from his wife, with whom he had five children. [16]
In February 2009, Middelhoff founded the investment company BLM (Berger Lahnstein Middelhoff & Partners LLP) in London with Roland Berger and Florian Lahnstein; Middelhoff became its chairman. In September 2009, Germany1 took over the majority of the manufacturer of power supply devices AEG Power Solutions. In 2010, Germany1 was renamed 3W Power Holdings, the company headquarters were relocated from the British tax haven of Guernsey to Luxembourg, and Middelhoff was elected to the Board of Directors.
In 2010, this company was split into two legally and economically independent companies: Pulse Capital Partners LLC in New York with Thomas Middelhoff as Managing Partner and RiverRock European Capital Partners LLP in London. Pulse Capital Partners took over the hedge fund activities of Berger Lahnstein Middelhoff & Partners. The official start of business was in March 2011. The company specializes in advising investors on hedge fund selection and portfolio structuring. Middelhoff was one of three managing partners. In 2013, Middelhoff announced he had taken on a new role as a director and partner in Hong Kong media company BT Capital.
Middelhoff wrote his autobiography A 115 - The fall, which was published in September 2017. On October 20, 2017, the Stuttgart Regional Court granted an injunction by the news magazine Der Spiegel , so that the book in its original version written by Middelhoff could no longer be sold. Middelhoff claimed in the book that the editors of Der Spiegel had researched improperly, withheld facts and relied on dubious sources. [19] The book has since been published in a further edition and in a paperback version and contains an afterword by Bernd Schünemann, one of the leading legal scholars who has critically examined the legal proceedings to which Middelhoff was subjected. [20]
On November 23, 2017, the documentary People Up Close: Thomas Middelhoff – Crash of a Top Manager was broadcast on WDR. WDR stopped the broadcast three days before the scheduled date after learning that the producer had made an agreement with Middelhoff to show him the film before it was broadcast publicly. [21] The production company later sold the rights to OMR. The latter produced a film of just under 60 minutes, which was published on YouTube and has since received around 700,000 views. [22] [23]
On August 20, 2019, his second book Schuldig was published, which made it onto the Spiegel bestseller list. [24] [25]
In October 2020, his book Future missed? Why Germany missed digitization. And how the crisis is helping us to make the connection after all was published, which Middelhoff wrote together with the entrepreneur Cornelius Boersch. The book deals with possible lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting economic crisis in 2020 for digitization.
The Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA, commonly known as Bertelsmann, is a German private multinational conglomerate corporation based in Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is one of the world's largest media conglomerates and is also active in the service sector and education.
RTL Group is a Luxembourg-based international media conglomerate, with another corporate centre in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The company operates 56 commercital and public television channels and 36 radio stations in Germany, France and other European countries. It also offers national streaming platforms, content productions and a range of digital services. Important segments of RTL Group are RTL Deutschland, Groupe M6, Fremantle, and RTL Nederland.
Reinhard Mohn was a German billionaire businessman and philanthropist. Under his leadership, Bertelsmann, once a medium-sized printing and publishing house, established in 1835, developed into a global media conglomerate. In 1977, he founded the non-profit Bertelsmann Stiftung, which is today one of the largest foundations in Germany, with worldwide reach.
Roland Berger is an international management consultancy headquartered in Munich. With 2,400 employees and 52 offices in 35 countries, it has a presence in all major industrialized and emerging markets. As the market leader in Germany, Roland Berger is the only European consultancy with an international presence and is one of the leading representatives of its industry. Annual sales in 2018 were around EUR 600 million, the most successful financial year to date.
Arcandor AG was a holding company located in Essen, Germany, that oversaw a number of companies operating in the businesses of mail order and internet shopping, department stores and tourism services. It was formed in 1999 by the merger of Karstadt Warenhaus AG, founded in 1920, with Quelle AG, founded in 1927. In 2005, the corporation had about 68,000 employees and annual sales of €15.5 billion. Its stocks were traded on the Mid Cap DAX until September 2009. The company's largest store was Kaufhaus des Westens (KaDeWe) in Berlin, and the largest store operated by Karstadt was in Frankfurt.
Karstadt Warenhaus GmbH was a German department store chain whose headquarters were in Essen. Until 30 September 2010 the company was a subsidiary of Arcandor AG and was responsible within the group for the business segment of over-the-counter retail.
Roland Berger is a German entrepreneur, consultant and philanthropist.
Rudolph Karstadt was a German entrepreneur.
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Madeleine Schickedanz is a German heiress and former philanthropist. She is the daughter of Gustav and Grete Schickedanz, the founders of catalog retailer Quelle Versand, which was merged with Karstadt to form Arcandor, a company listed in Germany's Mid Cap DAX stock index until its 2009 bankruptcy.
Manfred Lahnstein is a German politician of the Social Democratic Party (SPD). In 1982 he was German Federal Minister of Finance as well as Federal Minister of Economics and until 2004 worked for the media conglomerate Bertelsmann.
Cornelius Boersch is a German serial entrepreneur, technology investor, business angel, and author. He is the founder of the investment companies Mountain Partners AG and Conny & Co. Boersch is considered as one of the most active and well-known investors in the (European) technology and start-up scene and is the initiator of the annual Entrepreneurs Day at Tegernsee, Bavaria, which takes place annually since 2007. His best-known investments are Alando.de, Lieferando, the Scout Group, wefox, Kavak, and reBuy.
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Axel Wieandt is a German manager. He has been serving as a honorary professor at WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management since 2004.
René Benko is an Austrian real estate, media and retail investor and founder of the Signa Holding. The company is considered Austria's largest privately held real estate conglomerate. Benko is one of the richest Austrians. Numerous controversies have surrounded Benko’s professional career.
Jan Henric Buettner is a German entrepreneur.
Konrad Hilbers is a German businessman, organizational theorist, and Adjunct Professor "Practice of Information and Media management" at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
Edgar Berger is the Chief Executive Officer of the AutoScout24 Group since April 2020. He has more than 25 years of experience in the media, entertainment and tech sector. Berger held the position of chairman and CEO international of Sony Music Entertainment from 2011 to 2017, responsible for business outside the United States, before being replaced by Rob Stringer. Previously, Berger worked for Bertelsmann, RTL and Roland Berger Strategy Consultants. He has been on the board of the German Music Industry Association.
Thomas Rabe is a German business executive. In 2006, he was appointed to the Bertelsmann executive board, of which he has been chairman and chief executive officer since 2012. Under his leadership, the group has become more international, more digital and more diversified. In particular, he has advanced the business with music rights and the educational division. Additionally, Rabe was appointed chief executive officer of RTL Group in 2019.
Christoph Mohn is a German entrepreneur. In 2013, he became Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Bertelsmann. Since 2021, he has also been Chairman of the Steering Committee of Bertelsmann Verwaltungsgesellschaft (BVG) and has assumed the role of family spokesperson there. Moreover, Mohn chairs the Executive Board of the Reinhard Mohn Foundation and serves on the Board of Trustees of the Bertelsmann Stiftung.
Hintergrund ist unter anderem ein Sonderbonus, den der am 11. Mai 1953 geborene Middelhoff bei seinem Ausscheiden im Jahr 2009 erhalten hatte.[One of the reasons for this is a special bonus that Middelhoff, who was born on May 11, 1953, received when he left the company in 2009.]