Sections Skip to content Skip to site index Corner office A lifer within the Pritzker organization, Mr. Hoplamazian reorganized the family business during an acrimonious feud, then took over the hotel chain. Credit Credit Erik Tanner for The New York Times Supported by ByDavid Gelles Oct. 19, 2018 Mark Hoplamazian, the chief executive of Hyatt Hotels, has worked for one family for the bulk of his professional career. He attended Harvard College and got his M.B.A. at the University of Chicago. After short stints at First Boston and the Boston Consulting Group, he joined the Pritzker family’s sprawling business empire in 1989. Inside the Pritzker organization, Mr. Hoplamazian got an intense and varied introduction to business, working closely with Jay Pritzker, the family’s influential patriarch, on companies including Hyatt Hotels and the industrial behemoth Marmon. But in the years after Mr. Pritzker’s death in 1999, a family feud erupted, and it fell to Mr. Hoplamazian and his team to dismantle the Pritzker empire and try to appease warring factions. Eventually, Mr. Hoplamazian was made C.E.O. of Hyatt. This interview, which was condensed and edited for clarity, was conducted at the Hyatt Centric Times Square in New York City. What did… Read full this story
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