Hiroshi Mikitani | |
---|---|
Mikitani at the 37th G8 Summit in May 2011
|
|
Born |
Kobe, Hyogo, Japan |
March 11, 1965
Nationality | Japanese |
Alma mater |
Hitotsubashi University Harvard University |
Occupation | Founder, CEO and Chairman of Rakuten |
Years active | 1988–present |
Net worth | $6.1 billion (March 2017) |
Spouse(s) | Married |
Children | Two |
Website |
Hiroshi Mikitani Twitter account Hiroshi Mikitani English Twitter account |
Hiroshi Mikitani Twitter account
Hiroshi Mikitani (三木谷浩史 Mikitani Hiroshi?) (born March 11, 1965) is a Japanese billionaire businessman and the founder and CEO of Rakuten.
Mikitani was born in Kobe, Hyogo prefecture, Japan. Mikitani attended Hitotsubashi University, graduating in 1988. While working for the Industrial Bank of Japan, Mikitani was transferred to the US in 1993. He studied at Harvard Business School, earning the 9-Week certificate in Advanced Leadership in 2011.
His father was an economist, Ryoichi Mikitani (Kobe University Professor Emeritus, Yale University Professor). His mother, Setsuko spent her elementary school age in New York. After her graduation from Kobe University, she worked for a trading company. His sister, Ikuko is a physician (MD in Osaka University). His brother, Kenichi is a University of Tokyo professor in Biology.
Mikitani worked at the Industrial Bank of Japan (now part of Mizuho Corporate Bank) from 1988 to 1996. In 1997, he left to start his own consulting group called Crimson Group.
On February 7, 1997 Mikitani founded Rakuten with a few young co-founders and just 250,000 yen of their own money. He was president from its founding, and in 2001 he also became chairman. In addition, he is also head of the E-Commerce and Banking Business Units and Head of the Development Unit. Among his other titles are also Chairman of Rakuten Travel, Inc., Chairman of Crimson Football Club, Inc., Director (President of Board of Directors) of PRICEMINISTER S.A.S., Director (Chairman) of Kobo Inc.
From March 2010, Mikitani has implemented a plan that he calls "Englishization", gradually making English the language of Rakuten, despite the fact the company is based in Japan with mainly Japanese staff. While the plan was dismissed as "stupid" by Honda president Takanobu Ito in 2010, Mikitani believes that: "English is not an advantage anymore -- it is a requirement." In 2011, Mikitani's Englishization initiative was featured in a Harvard Business Review case study.