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Difference between revisions of "Max Geldens"

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{{person
 
{{person
 
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|description=Dutch director of McKinsey & Company who wrote and gave a working paper for the [[1984 Bilderberg]]
 
|namebase=http://www.namebase.net/names/nn01.cgi?GELDENS_MAX_
 
|namebase=http://www.namebase.net/names/nn01.cgi?GELDENS_MAX_
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|image=Max Geldens.png
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|alma_mater=Dartmouth College,Harvard Business School
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|nationality=Dutch
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|birth_date=1932
 
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|death_date=1989
 
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[[image:De Industrie Uitgedaagd 1983 - Gerrit Wagner, Max Geldens, Victor Halberstadt & Wisse Dekker 932-5284.jpg|444px|left|thumbnail|De Industrie Uitgedaagd 1983 - [[Gerrit Wagner]], Max Geldens, [[Victor Halberstadt]] & [[Wisse Dekker]]]]
 
[[image:De Industrie Uitgedaagd 1983 - Gerrit Wagner, Max Geldens, Victor Halberstadt & Wisse Dekker 932-5284.jpg|444px|left|thumbnail|De Industrie Uitgedaagd 1983 - [[Gerrit Wagner]], Max Geldens, [[Victor Halberstadt]] & [[Wisse Dekker]]]]
'''Max Geldens''' wrote a working paper for the session on ''Future Employment Trends in the Industrialized Democracies'' at the [[1984 Bilderberg]].<ref name=bb1984report>[[File:Bilderberg-Conference-Report-1984.pdf]]</ref>
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'''Max Geldens''' was CEO of the Dutch branch of the consultancy [[McKinsey & Company]] in [[Amsterdam]], and a champion of [[free enterprise]]. He wrote a working paper for the session on ''Future Employment Trends in the Industrialized Democracies'' at the [[1984 Bilderberg]].<ref name=bb1984report>[[File:Bilderberg-Conference-Report-1984.pdf]]</ref>
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==Education==
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Geldens studied economics at [[Dartmouth College]] in Hanover (USA) and received a Masters degree in Business Administration from [[Harvard Business School]].<ref name=nrc>https://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/1989/07/21/max-geldens-1932-1989-controversiele-goeroe-kb_000031150-a3604830</ref>
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==Career==
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Geldens joined McKinsey in [[1961]] and quickly advanced to the top of the American corporation, where he became a board member in 1968. Under his leadership, the Benelux office in [[Amsterdam]] grew from a consulting firm with no more than a handful of consultants in the early seventies, to the most prestigious office in the Netherlands with more than sixty consultants at his farewell in [[1986]].<ref name=nrc/><ref>https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/181199660/max-geldens</ref>
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Under his leadership, McKinsey oversaw the often unpopular downsizing and reorganizations in poorly performing companies in the [[1970s]].<ref name=nrc/>
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 08:31, 29 December 2024

Person.png Max GeldensRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Max Geldens.png
Born1932
Died1989 (Age 56)
Nationality Dutch
Alma mater •  Dartmouth College
•  Harvard Business School
Dutch director of McKinsey & Company who wrote and gave a working paper for the 1984 Bilderberg
De Industrie Uitgedaagd 1983 - Gerrit Wagner, Max Geldens, Victor Halberstadt & Wisse Dekker

Max Geldens was CEO of the Dutch branch of the consultancy McKinsey & Company in Amsterdam, and a champion of free enterprise. He wrote a working paper for the session on Future Employment Trends in the Industrialized Democracies at the 1984 Bilderberg.[1]

Education

Geldens studied economics at Dartmouth College in Hanover (USA) and received a Masters degree in Business Administration from Harvard Business School.[2]

Career

Geldens joined McKinsey in 1961 and quickly advanced to the top of the American corporation, where he became a board member in 1968. Under his leadership, the Benelux office in Amsterdam grew from a consulting firm with no more than a handful of consultants in the early seventies, to the most prestigious office in the Netherlands with more than sixty consultants at his farewell in 1986.[2][3]

Under his leadership, McKinsey oversaw the often unpopular downsizing and reorganizations in poorly performing companies in the 1970s.[2]


 

Event Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/198411 May 198413 May 1984Sweden
Saltsjöbaden
The 32nd Bilderberg, held in Sweden
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References