Paul Steven Walsh | |
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Born |
Middleton, Lancashire, England |
15 May 1955
Residence | Billingshurst, West Sussex |
Nationality | English |
Citizenship | British |
Education |
Royton and Crompton School Oldham College |
Alma mater | Manchester Polytechnic |
Occupation | Businessman |
Years active | 1976 to present |
Employer | Diageo |
Known for |
Seagram acquisition, divestment of Pillsbury and Burger King businesses |
Home town | Chadderton, Lancashire |
Salary | £11.2 million (June 2011 – June 2012 |
Predecessor | John McGrath |
Successor | Ivan Menezes |
Board member of | Compass Diageo FedEx Corporation Unilever Avanti Communications |
Spouse(s) | Julie Lewis Walsh (18 May 2013 - present) |
Children | Dean Paul Walsh |
Parent(s) | Arthur Anne |
Signature | |
Paul Steven Walsh (born 15 May 1955) is an English businessman. He was the chief executive of Diageo, the world's largest spirits group, for twelve years between 2000 and 2013.
Walsh was criticised in the press for what was seen as his excessive remuneration, but received admiration for his ability to build brands. He spent the majority of his career at Diageo and its precursor Grand Metropolitan. His most notable decision was the acquisition of the Seagram drinks company, which added Captain Morgan rum and Crown Royal Canadian whisky to Diageo's roster of brands.
Walsh's tenure in charge of Diageo closely mirrored his behaviour as head of the Pillsbury food business: selling off non-essential assets such as Burger King and aggressively marketing a select number of "core" brands. He was disciplined regarding prices paid for the acquisition of assets. Towards the end of his Diageo career, he increased the company's exposure to developing markets such as India and China.
In February 2014 Walsh became the non-executive chairman of Compass Group, the world's largest catering company. His role as an advisor to Diageo ended in September 2014.
Walsh was born in Middleton, and raised in the former mill town of Chadderton, Lancashire, in the North West of England. The only child of Arthur and Anne Walsh, his father was a pipe fitter who later ran a small thermal engineering company, and his mother was a housewife. Walsh claims to have inherited his work ethic from his father, his organisational skills from his mother, and his confidence from both parents, who he has described as "strict" but "loving". His great grandfather emigrated from Ireland, hence he bears the common Irish surname of Walsh.