Terry Gou

{[['']]}

Gou Tai-ming, also known as Terry Gou, (born October 8, 1950 in Banqiao Township, Taipei County) is a Taiwanese tycoon who is the founder and chairman of Foxconn, a company that manufactures electronics on contract for other companies such as Apple Inc.. It is the largest such electronics manufacturing services company in the world, with factories in several countries, mostly in mainland China, where it employs 1.2 million people and is its largest exporter.

Gou's parents lived in mainland China's Shanxi Province before they fled to Taiwan in 1949, where Gou was born. His father had worked as a policeman in the past. As the first child of his family, Gou received education from elementary school to post college. After graduation, he continued to work in a rubber factory, working at a grinding wheel, and medicine plant until the age of 24. Gou has two younger brothers, Tai-Chiang Gou and Tai-Cheng Gou, who have both become successful businessmen as well.

Gou founded Hon Hai in Taiwan in 1974 with $7500 in startup money and ten workers, making plastic parts for television sets in a rented shed in Tucheng, a suburb of Taipei. A turning point came in 1980 when he received an order from Atari to make connectors to the console joystick. He further expanded his business in the 1980s by embarking on an 11 month trip across the US in search of customers. As an aggressive salesman, Gou dropped in unannounced on companies and was able to get additional orders.

n 1988 he opened his first factory in mainland China, in Shenzhen, where his largest factory remains today. Operations in China took on a giant dimension when Gou vertically integrated the assembly process and facilities for workers. The manufacturing site became a campus that included housing, dining, and medical care for the workers, and even chicken farming to replenish the cafeteria.

In 1996, Hon Hai started building chassis for Compaq desktops. From this turning point, he gained other customers for building the bare bones chassis including HP, IBM, and Apple, and would go on to grow into a consumer electronics giant within years.

He now owns 13% of the public company and was ranked 239th on Forbes magazine's 2013 list of the world's richest people, with a net worth of US$5.1 billion.

Gou drew controversy when comments he made during a board meeting about employees were translated into English as "Hon Hai has a workforce of over one million worldwide and as human beings are also animals, to manage one million animals gives me a headache." Through Foxconn, Gou would protest that the translation was poor and took his comments out of context.

Regarding the January 2012 Taiwanese Presidential election, the Kuomingtang website indicates that, "Hon Hai Group Chairman Terry Gou threw his support behind Ma Ying-jeou."

Gou and his first wife, Serena Lin (Lín Shúrú, 1950–2005), have a son (born 1976) who works in the film industry and a daughter (born 1978) who worked in the financial sector. Gou founded an educational charity organization with Lin in 2000 and intends to eventually give away one third of his wealth to charity. After her mother died, she quit her job and operated the charity organization.

In 2002 he bought a Roztěž castle near Kutná Hora in the Czech Republic for $30 million.

In 2005, Serena Lin died of breast cancer at the age of 55. Gou's younger brother, Tai-Cheng Guo, died in 2007 of leukemia. Gou married his second wife, choreographer Delia Tseng (born 1974) on July 26, 2008. Tseng and Gou have two children, a daughter (born April 30, 2009) and a son (born November 19, 2010).

In 2007 court documents were revealed showing that he had been blackmailed by a woman who, in 1992, secretly shot a video of them having sexual intercourse during an affair.

Terry Gou runs Hon Hai Precision, the world's largest electronics contract manufacturer and a key supplier to Apple as well as HP, Sony and Nokia. Better known by its trade name Foxconn, the company has faced years of controversy over labor practices and employee suicides. Gou is looking to expand the Taiwan-based Hon Hai beyond its tech manufacturing core and into software development and telecommunications services. In 2014 Hon Hai unveiled plans to invest $1 billion in Indonesia and in 2013 it said it would invest $40 million to build a plant in Pennsylvania and develop robotics with Carnegie Mellon University. It's also pushing beyond manufacturing, planning to enter the 4G telecom business in Taiwan.
Share this article :

Share This

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More

Followers

Search Leader

 
Copyright © 2015. Most Powerful Leaders - All Rights Reserved
Template Created by Creating Website Published by Mas Template