Karl von der Heyden

Karl von der Heyden
Born 1936
Berlin, Germany

Karl von der Heyden was Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of PepsiCo, Inc. from 1996 to 2001. He had rejoined the Company in September 1996 as Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer. During his tenure, he concentrated on re-focusing the company by spinning off or selling the restaurant companies, buying Tropicana and Quaker Oats, and taking the bottling business, Pepsi Bottling Group, public, among other things.[1] He had previously retired from RJR Nabisco, where he was co-chairman and chief executive officer, through May 1993 and chief financial officer since 1989.[2]

In December 1993 he took over as president and chief executive officer at financially troubled Metallgesellschaft Corp. on an interim basis and successfully restructured the company in a period of seven months.[3] He had also served as Chairman of the Financial Accounting Standard Board’s Advisory Council (FASAC).

Before joining RJR Nabisco, von der Heyden was senior vice president, chief financial officer and a director of H.J. Heinz Company. He joined Heinz in 1980 as vice president of finance and treasurer. Previously, von der Heyden had worked for PepsiCo in various senior management capacities: vice president, controller from 1974 to 1977, chief financial officer of Pepsi-Cola Company from 1977–1979, and then vice president of manufacturing for the Pepsi-Cola Bottling Group.[4]

Von der Heyden began his business career as a management trainee at the Berliner Bank AG. He joined Coopers & Lybrand, Philadelphia, in 1963, and in 1966 he moved to Pitney Bowes, where he advanced to the position of corporate controller.[5]

Von der Heyden was born in 1936 in Berlin, Germany and attended the Free University of Berlin. He graduated from Duke University in 1962 and obtained an MBA degree from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in 1964.[6]

Von der Heyden is the recipient of The International Center in New York's Award of Excellence and the Ellis Island Medal of Honor.[7] In 2010 he was inducted into the Financial Executives International Hall of Fame.

Von der Heyden serves as an independent director on the board of Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc., and has served on the boards of Macy's, Inc, AstraZeneca, NYSE Euronext, DreamWorks Animation, Aramark, Cadbury Schweppes, and numerous other companies.[8] He is a trustee of New York City Global Partners. He served as Co-Chairman of the American Academy in Berlin.[9] and as a former trustee of Duke University, the YMCA of Greater New York, and other nonprofit organizations. He has two children and five grandchildren, and lives with his wife, Mary Ellen, in New York City.

References

  1. ^ Company News; PepsiCo Says Vice Chairman will Retire in Early 2001,The New York Times, September 13, 2000
  2. ^ http://investing.businessweek.com, Karl von der Heyden:Executive Profile & Biography,accessdate 2009-12-12
  3. ^ Company News; Troubled Metallgesellschaft Chooses Chief for U.S. Arm,The New York Times,July 7, 1994
  4. ^ Business People;Chief Financial Officer Named at RJR Nabisco,Daniel F. Cuff,The New York Times, June 16, 1989|page D4
  5. ^ Business People;Chief Financial Officer Named at RJR Nabisco
  6. ^ http://investing.businessweek.com, Karl von der Heyden:Executive Profile & Biography,accessdate 2009-12-12
  7. ^ http://neco.org/index.php, Ellis Island Medal of Honor Recipients,accessdate 2009-12-12
  8. ^ http://investing.businessweek.com, Karl von der Heyden:Executive Profile & Biography,accessdate 2009-12-12
  9. ^ Dr. Henry A. Kissinger and Karl von der Heyden Elected Co-Chairmen of the American Academy in Berlin,http://www.americanacademyinberlin.de, The American Academy in Berlin,February 12, 2009,accessdate 2009-12-12