Timothy Boyle | |
---|---|
Born | 1949 (age 75–76) Portland, Oregon, US |
Education | Jesuit High School |
Alma mater | University of Oregon |
Occupation | Businessman |
Title | President and CEO, Columbia Sportswear |
Term | 1988- |
Spouse | Mary Boyle |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Gert Lammfromm Boyle Joseph Cornelius "Neal" Boyle |
Timothy P. Boyle [1] (born 1949) is an American billionaire, and the president and CEO of Columbia Sportswear. [2]
According to Forbes, his estimated net worth was US$2.0 billion in November 2022. [3]
Boyle was born and raised in Portland, Oregon. [4] He is one of three children of Joseph Cornelius "Neal" Boyle, an Irish Catholic, and Gertrude Lammfromm. [5] His mother was Jewish and fled as a teenager from Nazi Germany. She immigrated to Portland, Oregon, [6] and converted to Catholicism after marriage. [6] He has two sisters. [5]
His grandfather purchased the Rosenfeld Hat Company [5] and changed its name to the Columbia Hat Company [7] (after the river). [5] His father became president of Columbia Hat after his grandfather died and then diversified the hat business into outerwear [5] for hunters, fishermen, and skiers. [6] In 1960, his mother designed the first fishing vest (his father was an avid fisherman) and the name of the company was changed to Columbia Sportswear. [7]
Boyle was educated at Jesuit High School, in Beaverton, Oregon, just outside Portland, followed by the University of Oregon, where he earned a bachelor's degree in journalism in 1971. [8]
Boyle was still at university when his father died in 1970 [9] at the age of 47. He left to join his mother, who had become president of Columbia Hat, which was then earning $800,000 in annual sales and had 40 employees. [5] The company struggled and teetered on bankruptcy [10] until in the 1970s when Boyle and his mother refocused the business on outdoor clothing and casual wear which paralleled a general trend away from formal work attire. [11] In 1975, they were the first company to introduce Gore-Tex parkas. [7]
In 1986, Columbia released the Bugaboo, a jacket with a zip out lining which became quite trendy and further propelled the company's growth. [5] Columbia was unique among specialty clothing manufacturers in that it would sell its products to any retail shop or chain. [6] In 1987, Columbia had $18.8 million in sales and by 1997 it had grown to $353.5 million. [6] Boyle took over from his mother, Gert, as company president in 1988. [12] [13]
The company went public in 1998. [11] In the early 2010s, Boyle refocused Columbia away from top line products and more towards the mid-range, moderately priced products; he also continued to align sales with changes happening in the retail industry, shifting the company more toward internet sales. [2]
Columbia grew into a $6.5bn public company, [14] and Boyle's 41% ownership interest in Columbia Sportswear was worth over $1.0 billion in 2013. [2]
In 2020, Forbes ranked Boyle No. 378 on the Forbes 400 list of the richest people in America. [15]
Boyle and his wife Mary have a son, educated at Drake University in Des Moines, and a daughter, educated at the University of Washington. [16] They live in Portland, Oregon. [3]
In 2007, he and his wife Mary donated $5 million to the University of Oregon. [17] In 2016, he donated $10 million to the university's aquatic animal care facility. [18] More recently the couple donated $10 million towards a biomedical data science initiative. [19] In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Boyle reduced his own salary to $10,000 while maintaining the full salary and benefits of all his company's retail employees. [20]