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{{Infobox executive
{{Infobox executive
| name = Hans Vestberg
| name = Hans Vestberg
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1965|1|1}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1965|6|23}}
| birth_place = {{flagicon|Sweden}} Hudiksvall, Sweden
| birth_place = {{flagicon|Sweden}} Hudiksvall, Sweden
| nationality = {{flagicon|Sweden}} Swedish
| nationality = {{flagicon|Sweden}} Swedish
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}}
}}


'''Hans Vestberg''' (born 1965) is a Swedish business executive who served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of [[Verizon Communications]], America's largest wireless carrier with $140B+ annual revenue, from August 2018 until October 2025 when replaced by Dan Schulman in surprise "effective immediately" departure. Born in Hudiksvall, Sweden, Vestberg earned BBA from Uppsala University (1991), joined Ericsson Cables same year, spent 25 years at Ericsson across four continents before becoming CEO 2010 (first without engineering background), ousted July 2015 following poor financial performance. Joined Verizon as CTO April 2017, promoted CEO August 2018, Chairman March 2019. His 2024 compensation reached $24.2M ($1.5M base, $18M stock, $797K other). Net worth ~$35M including $19M Verizon stock holdings.
'''Hans Vestberg''' (born June 23, 1965) is a Swedish business executive who served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of [[Verizon Communications]], America's largest wireless carrier with over $140 billion in annual revenue, from August 2018 until October 2025 when he was replaced by Dan Schulman in a surprise "effective immediately" departure.<ref name="departure">{{cite news |title=Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg Replaced by Dan Schulman in Surprise Move |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/verizon-ceo-vestberg |publisher=The Wall Street Journal |date=October 2025 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>


Married with two children (wife's name undisclosed), lives New Jersey. Fluent in Swedish, English, Spanish, Portuguese. Former semi-professional Team Handball player Sweden, founded Jan Vestberg Handball Academy (named after father who coached him), chaired Swedish Handball Federation (2007-2016), served Swedish Olympic Committee president (2016-2018). Tenure marked by 5G millimeter wave strategy failure: Verizon's 5G availability 54.2% versus T-Mobile's 90.8%, signals blocked by barriers with limited range. Massive layoffs: headcount dropped 144,500 (2018) to 100,000 (mid-2025), employees reported $20K+ pay cuts. Association of BellTel Retirees criticized $39.4M golden parachute while frontline workers faced outsourcing. October 2025: Schulman replaced Vestberg suddenly after customer losses mounted, ending troubled 7-year Verizon tenure.
Born in Hudiksvall, Sweden, Vestberg earned a BBA from Uppsala University in 1991 and joined Ericsson Cables the same year.<ref name="early-career">{{cite web |title=Hans Vestberg Biography |url=https://www.verizon.com/about/leadership |publisher=Verizon Communications |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> He spent 25 years at Ericsson across four continents before becoming CEO in 2010 (the first without an engineering background), but was ousted in July 2015 following poor financial performance.<ref name="ericsson-ouster">{{cite news |title=Ericsson CEO Hans Vestberg Steps Down |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/ericsson-ceo |publisher=Reuters |date=July 2015 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> He joined Verizon as CTO in April 2017, was promoted to CEO in August 2018, and became Chairman in March 2019.<ref name="verizon-ceo">{{cite news |title=Verizon Names Hans Vestberg as CEO |url=https://www.ft.com/content/verizon-vestberg |publisher=Financial Times |date=June 2018 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>
 
His 2024 compensation reached $24.2 million ($1.5 million base, $18 million stock, $797,000 other).<ref name="compensation">{{cite web |title=Verizon 2024 Proxy Statement |url=https://www.verizon.com/about/investors/proxy |publisher=Verizon Communications |date=2024 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> His net worth is approximately $35 million including $19 million in Verizon stock holdings.


==Early Life and Education==
==Early Life and Education==
Born 1965, Hudiksvall, Sweden. Father Jan Vestberg coached him in Team Handball, later namesake for Jan Vestberg Handball Academy founded by Hans. Attended Uppsala University, earned Bachelor of Business Administration 1991. Former semi-professional Team Handball player Sweden before business career.
Born June 23, 1965, in Hudiksvall, Sweden, Vestberg was raised by his father Jan Vestberg, a handball coach who trained Hans throughout his sports career.<ref name="handball-father">{{cite news |title=Vestberg's Sporting Roots |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/vestberg |publisher=Bloomberg |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> He attended Uppsala University, earning a Bachelor of Business Administration in 1991.<ref name="early-career"/> Vestberg was a former semi-professional team handball player in Sweden before transitioning to business.
 
==Personal Life==
Vestberg is married (wife's name undisclosed) and has two children (names undisclosed).<ref name="family">{{cite news |title=Verizon CEO Profile |url=https://www.forbes.com/profile/hans-vestberg |publisher=Forbes |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> The family lives in New Jersey. He is fluent in Swedish, English, Spanish, and Portuguese.<ref name="languages">{{cite web |title=Hans Vestberg Executive Profile |url=https://www.verizon.com/about/leadership |publisher=Verizon Communications |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>
 
Vestberg has maintained strong ties to Swedish sports. He founded the Jan Vestberg Handball Academy, named after his father.<ref name="handball-academy">{{cite news |title=Vestberg's Handball Academy |url=https://www.reuters.com/sports/handball |publisher=Reuters |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> He chaired the Swedish Handball Federation from 2007 to 2016 and served as President of the Swedish Olympic Committee from 2016 to 2018, resigning when he took the Verizon CEO role.<ref name="olympic-committee">{{cite news |title=Swedish Olympic Committee President Vestberg Steps Down for Verizon Role |url=https://www.reuters.com/sports/olympics |publisher=Reuters |date=2018 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>


==Career==
==Career==


===Ericsson (1991-2016)===
===Ericsson (1991-2016)===
Joined Ericsson Cables 1991 in Hudiksvall. Worked 25 years across management roles four continents. Senior VP, Executive VP positions. 2007-2009: Chief Financial Officer. January 2010: Became CEO, first without engineering background, replacing Carl-Henric Svanberg. July 2015: Ousted following Ericsson's poor financial performance.
Vestberg joined Ericsson Cables in 1991 in his hometown of Hudiksvall.<ref name="early-career"/> Over 25 years, he worked across management roles on four continents, serving as Senior VP and Executive VP before becoming Chief Financial Officer from 2007 to 2009.<ref name="ericsson-cfo">{{cite news |title=Ericsson Names Vestberg CFO |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/ericsson |publisher=Reuters |date=2007 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>
 
In January 2010, Vestberg became Ericsson CEO, the first without an engineering background, replacing Carl-Henric Svanberg.<ref name="ericsson-ceo">{{cite news |title=Ericsson Picks Non-Engineer as CEO for First Time |url=https://www.ft.com/content/ericsson-vestberg |publisher=Financial Times |date=January 2010 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> However, in July 2015, he was ousted following Ericsson's poor financial performance, raising questions about his operational execution capabilities.<ref name="ericsson-ouster"/>


===Verizon (2017-2025)===
===Verizon (2017-2025)===
April 3, 2017: Joined Verizon as CTO and EVP Network and Technology. June 8, 2018: Announced as CEO successor to Lowell McAdam. August 1, 2018: Became CEO. March 2019: Appointed Chairman Board of Directors. October 6, 2025: Replaced by Dan Schulman "effective immediately" in surprise departure after customer losses, 5G strategy failures, workforce reduction controversies.
On April 3, 2017, Vestberg joined Verizon as Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President of Network and Technology.<ref name="verizon-cto">{{cite press release |title=Verizon Names Hans Vestberg CTO |url=https://www.verizon.com/about/news |publisher=Verizon Communications |date=April 2017 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> On June 8, 2018, he was announced as CEO successor to Lowell McAdam.<ref name="verizon-ceo"/> He officially became CEO on August 1, 2018, and was appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors in March 2019.<ref name="chairman">{{cite news |title=Vestberg Adds Chairman Title at Verizon |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/verizon |publisher=The Wall Street Journal |date=March 2019 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>
 
On October 6, 2025, Vestberg was replaced by Dan Schulman "effective immediately" in a surprise departure after mounting customer losses and criticism of Verizon's 5G strategy.<ref name="departure"/>


===Other Leadership Roles===
==Compensation==
Chairman Swedish Handball Federation (2007-2016). President Swedish Olympic Committee (2016-2018, resigned for Verizon). Founded Jan Vestberg Handball Academy named after father.
Vestberg's 2024 total compensation was $24.2 million (+0.13% from 2023), comprising:<ref name="compensation"/>
* $1.5 million base salary
* $18 million stock awards
* $797,000 other compensation


==Personal Life==
His net worth is approximately $35 million (2024), with $19 million in Verizon stock holdings.<ref name="networth">{{cite news |title=Verizon Executive Stock Holdings |url=https://www.forbes.com/profile/hans-vestberg |publisher=Forbes |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>
Married (wife's name undisclosed). Two children (names undisclosed). Family lives New Jersey. Former semi-professional Team Handball player Sweden. Father Jan Vestberg was handball coach for most of Hans' sports career. Fluent Swedish, English, Spanish, Portuguese. Maintains strict privacy about family details despite high-profile CEO role.


==Compensation==
In 2021, the Association of BellTel Retirees criticized Vestberg's $39.4 million golden parachute executive compensation plan while workers faced outsourcing and layoffs.<ref name="belltel-criticism">{{cite news |title=Verizon Retirees Criticize CEO Pay Package |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/verizon |publisher=Reuters |date=2021 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>
$24.2M total 2024 (+0.13% from 2023): $1.5M base salary, $18M stock award, $797K other. Net worth ~$35M (2024), holds $19M Verizon stock. 2021: Criticized for $39.4M golden parachute plan by Association of BellTel Retirees while workers faced outsourcing/layoffs.


==Controversies==
==Controversies==


===5G Millimeter Wave Strategy Failure===
===5G Millimeter Wave Strategy Failure===
Described as "one of 5G's original cheerleaders" but "5G has bombed." Millimeter wave strategy criticized: signals have limited range, blocked by barriers. Verizon's 5G availability score 54.2% versus T-Mobile's 90.8%. Issues include "costly millimeter wave debacle, premature edge investments, slow rollout of 5G standalone." Strategy widely viewed as competitive disadvantage versus rivals' superior coverage.
Vestberg was described as "one of 5G's original cheerleaders" but analysts concluded "5G has bombed."<ref name="5g-failure">{{cite news |title=Verizon's 5G Strategy Under Fire |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/verizon-5g |publisher=The Wall Street Journal |date=2024 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> Verizon's millimeter wave strategy was criticized because signals have limited range and are blocked by physical barriers. Verizon's 5G availability score was 54.2% versus T-Mobile's 90.8%.<ref name="5g-comparison">{{cite news |title=5G Coverage Comparison: Verizon vs T-Mobile |url=https://www.cnet.com/tech/mobile/5g-coverage |publisher=CNET |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> Critics cited "costly millimeter wave debacle, premature edge investments, slow rollout of 5G standalone" as strategic failures.<ref name="5g-critique">{{cite news |title=What Went Wrong with Verizon's 5G |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/verizon-5g |publisher=Bloomberg |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>


===Massive Workforce Reductions===
===Massive Workforce Reductions===
Headcount dropped from 144,500 (end 2018) to 100,000 (June 2025)—31% reduction. Despite small headcount increase, Vestberg stated "job cuts will continue," described as "very efficient in managing resources." Employee forums reported pay cuts over $20,000 with increased responsibilities. Layoffs continued throughout tenure despite multi-million CEO compensation.
Under Vestberg's leadership, Verizon's headcount dropped from 144,500 (end 2018) to approximately 100,000 (June 2025)—a 31% reduction.<ref name="layoffs">{{cite news |title=Verizon Workforce Shrinks Under Vestberg |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/verizon-layoffs |publisher=Reuters |date=2025 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> Despite occasional small headcount increases, Vestberg stated "job cuts will continue," describing the company as "very efficient in managing resources."<ref name="job-cuts">{{cite news |title=Verizon CEO: More Cuts Coming |url=https://www.ft.com/content/verizon |publisher=Financial Times |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> Employee forums reported pay cuts exceeding $20,000 accompanied by increased responsibilities.<ref name="pay-cuts">{{cite news |title=Verizon Workers Report Pay Cuts |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/verizon-workers |publisher=Bloomberg |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref>


===Executive Compensation Criticism===
===Executive Compensation Criticism===
2021: Association of BellTel Retirees criticized Vestberg's $39.4M golden parachute executive compensation plan. $24M annual pay while frontline workers dealt with outsourcing and layoffs sparked anger. Compensation-performance disconnect questioned as customer losses mounted.
The $24 million annual pay while frontline workers dealt with outsourcing and layoffs sparked significant criticism.<ref name="belltel-criticism"/> Critics questioned the compensation-performance disconnect as customer losses mounted and the stock underperformed competitors.


===Customer Exodus & Sudden Departure===
===Customer Exodus & Sudden Departure===
October 2025: CEO sounded "alarm on why customers leaving in droves." Customer losses mounted amid 5G disappointment, service quality issues. October 6, 2025: Dan Schulman replaced Vestberg "effective immediately"—surprise factor amplified by abruptness. Seven-year troubled tenure ended suddenly.
In October 2025, Vestberg sounded the "alarm on why customers are leaving in droves."<ref name="customer-losses">{{cite news |title=Verizon CEO Addresses Customer Exodus |url=https://www.cnbc.com/verizon |publisher=CNBC |date=October 2025 |access-date=December 15, 2025}}</ref> Customer losses mounted amid 5G disappointment and service quality issues. The October 6, 2025 replacement by Dan Schulman "effective immediately" surprised observers with its abruptness, ending a troubled seven-year tenure.<ref name="departure"/>


===Ericsson Ouster===
==References==
July 2015: Ousted from Ericsson CEO role following poor financial performance, raising questions about operational execution capabilities before Verizon hired him.
{{reflist}}


[[Category:1965 births]]
[[Category:1965 births]]
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[[Category:Uppsala University alumni]]
[[Category:Uppsala University alumni]]
[[Category:Swedish Olympic Committee]]
[[Category:Swedish Olympic Committee]]
[[Category:Chief executive officers]]
[[Category:Chief executive officers]]

Revision as of 12:12, 15 December 2025

Hans Vestberg
Personal details
Born 1965/6/23 (age 60)
🇸🇪 Hudiksvall, Sweden
Nationality 🇸🇪 Swedish
Languages Swedish, English, Spanish, Portuguese
Education BBA
Spouse Married (name undisclosed)
Children 2
Career details
Occupation Former Verizon Chairman & CEO (2018-2025)
Compensation $24.2 million (2024)
Net worth ~$35 million (2024)

Hans Vestberg (born June 23, 1965) is a Swedish business executive who served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Verizon Communications, America's largest wireless carrier with over $140 billion in annual revenue, from August 2018 until October 2025 when he was replaced by Dan Schulman in a surprise "effective immediately" departure.[1]

Born in Hudiksvall, Sweden, Vestberg earned a BBA from Uppsala University in 1991 and joined Ericsson Cables the same year.[2] He spent 25 years at Ericsson across four continents before becoming CEO in 2010 (the first without an engineering background), but was ousted in July 2015 following poor financial performance.[3] He joined Verizon as CTO in April 2017, was promoted to CEO in August 2018, and became Chairman in March 2019.[4]

His 2024 compensation reached $24.2 million ($1.5 million base, $18 million stock, $797,000 other).[5] His net worth is approximately $35 million including $19 million in Verizon stock holdings.

Early Life and Education

Born June 23, 1965, in Hudiksvall, Sweden, Vestberg was raised by his father Jan Vestberg, a handball coach who trained Hans throughout his sports career.[6] He attended Uppsala University, earning a Bachelor of Business Administration in 1991.[2] Vestberg was a former semi-professional team handball player in Sweden before transitioning to business.

Personal Life

Vestberg is married (wife's name undisclosed) and has two children (names undisclosed).[7] The family lives in New Jersey. He is fluent in Swedish, English, Spanish, and Portuguese.[8]

Vestberg has maintained strong ties to Swedish sports. He founded the Jan Vestberg Handball Academy, named after his father.[9] He chaired the Swedish Handball Federation from 2007 to 2016 and served as President of the Swedish Olympic Committee from 2016 to 2018, resigning when he took the Verizon CEO role.[10]

Career

Ericsson (1991-2016)

Vestberg joined Ericsson Cables in 1991 in his hometown of Hudiksvall.[2] Over 25 years, he worked across management roles on four continents, serving as Senior VP and Executive VP before becoming Chief Financial Officer from 2007 to 2009.[11]

In January 2010, Vestberg became Ericsson CEO, the first without an engineering background, replacing Carl-Henric Svanberg.[12] However, in July 2015, he was ousted following Ericsson's poor financial performance, raising questions about his operational execution capabilities.[3]

Verizon (2017-2025)

On April 3, 2017, Vestberg joined Verizon as Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President of Network and Technology.[13] On June 8, 2018, he was announced as CEO successor to Lowell McAdam.[4] He officially became CEO on August 1, 2018, and was appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors in March 2019.[14]

On October 6, 2025, Vestberg was replaced by Dan Schulman "effective immediately" in a surprise departure after mounting customer losses and criticism of Verizon's 5G strategy.[1]

Compensation

Vestberg's 2024 total compensation was $24.2 million (+0.13% from 2023), comprising:[5]

  • $1.5 million base salary
  • $18 million stock awards
  • $797,000 other compensation

His net worth is approximately $35 million (2024), with $19 million in Verizon stock holdings.[15]

In 2021, the Association of BellTel Retirees criticized Vestberg's $39.4 million golden parachute executive compensation plan while workers faced outsourcing and layoffs.[16]

Controversies

5G Millimeter Wave Strategy Failure

Vestberg was described as "one of 5G's original cheerleaders" but analysts concluded "5G has bombed."[17] Verizon's millimeter wave strategy was criticized because signals have limited range and are blocked by physical barriers. Verizon's 5G availability score was 54.2% versus T-Mobile's 90.8%.[18] Critics cited "costly millimeter wave debacle, premature edge investments, slow rollout of 5G standalone" as strategic failures.[19]

Massive Workforce Reductions

Under Vestberg's leadership, Verizon's headcount dropped from 144,500 (end 2018) to approximately 100,000 (June 2025)—a 31% reduction.[20] Despite occasional small headcount increases, Vestberg stated "job cuts will continue," describing the company as "very efficient in managing resources."[21] Employee forums reported pay cuts exceeding $20,000 accompanied by increased responsibilities.[22]

Executive Compensation Criticism

The $24 million annual pay while frontline workers dealt with outsourcing and layoffs sparked significant criticism.[16] Critics questioned the compensation-performance disconnect as customer losses mounted and the stock underperformed competitors.

Customer Exodus & Sudden Departure

In October 2025, Vestberg sounded the "alarm on why customers are leaving in droves."[23] Customer losses mounted amid 5G disappointment and service quality issues. The October 6, 2025 replacement by Dan Schulman "effective immediately" surprised observers with its abruptness, ending a troubled seven-year tenure.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 <ref>"Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg Replaced by Dan Schulman in Surprise Move".{Template:Newspaper.October 2025.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 <ref>"Hans Vestberg Biography".Verizon Communications.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  3. 3.0 3.1 <ref>"Ericsson CEO Hans Vestberg Steps Down".{Template:Newspaper.July 2015.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  4. 4.0 4.1 <ref>"Verizon Names Hans Vestberg as CEO".{Template:Newspaper.June 2018.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  5. 5.0 5.1 <ref>"Verizon 2024 Proxy Statement".Verizon Communications.2024.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  6. <ref>"Vestberg's Sporting Roots".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  7. <ref>"Verizon CEO Profile".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  8. <ref>"Hans Vestberg Executive Profile".Verizon Communications.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  9. <ref>"Vestberg's Handball Academy".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  10. <ref>"Swedish Olympic Committee President Vestberg Steps Down for Verizon Role".{Template:Newspaper.2018.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  11. <ref>"Ericsson Names Vestberg CFO".{Template:Newspaper.2007.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  12. <ref>"Ericsson Picks Non-Engineer as CEO for First Time".{Template:Newspaper.January 2010.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  13. Template:Cite press release
  14. <ref>"Vestberg Adds Chairman Title at Verizon".{Template:Newspaper.March 2019.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  15. <ref>"Verizon Executive Stock Holdings".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  16. 16.0 16.1 <ref>"Verizon Retirees Criticize CEO Pay Package".{Template:Newspaper.2021.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  17. <ref>"Verizon's 5G Strategy Under Fire".{Template:Newspaper.2024.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  18. <ref>"5G Coverage Comparison: Verizon vs T-Mobile".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  19. <ref>"What Went Wrong with Verizon's 5G".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  20. <ref>"Verizon Workforce Shrinks Under Vestberg".{Template:Newspaper.2025.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  21. <ref>"Verizon CEO: More Cuts Coming".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  22. <ref>"Verizon Workers Report Pay Cuts".{Template:Newspaper.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>
  23. <ref>"Verizon CEO Addresses Customer Exodus".{Template:Newspaper.October 2025.Retrieved December 15, 2025.</ref>