Jim Koch

C. James Koch (/kʊk/; born May 27, 1949) is an American entrepreneur, the co-founder and chairman of the Boston Beer Company, the producers of Samuel Adams beer.

Jim Koch
Jim Koch, 2013
Born
C. James Koch

(1949-05-27) May 27, 1949
Cincinnati, Ohio, US
NationalityAmerican
EducationHarvard University
OccupationBusinessman
Known forCo-founder and chairman of the Boston Beer Company
Spouse(s)Susan (div.)
(
m. 1994)

Early life

Koch was born in Cincinnati, Ohio to Charles Joseph Koch, Jr and Dorothy Kautz Koch.[1]

Koch earned a Bachelor of Arts, Juris Doctor, and Master of Business Administration from Harvard University.

Career

He is a former consultant with The Boston Consulting Group. He was formerly an Outward Bound instructor. In 1984, Koch co-founded the Boston Beer Company, the producers of Samuel Adams beer.[2]

In 2016, Koch published Quench Your Own Thirst: Business Lessons Learned Over a Beer or Two, in which he discussed how he left his career as a management consultant to start his own brewery using his great-great-grandfather’s recipe.[3]

In August 2018, Koch said the corporate tax cut of 2017 helped to play a major role in making Boston Beer Company more competitive in regard to foreign competitors. Koch stated that "When I started Sam Adams, American beer was a joke, and it pissed me off. And now, American brewers make the best beer in the world. And the tax reform was a very big deal for all of us, because 85 percent of the beer made in the United States is owned by foreign companies."[4][5]

Personal life

Koch was married to Susan but had split up around the time that he launched the company.[6][7] He remarried to entrepreneur Cynthia Fisher in 1994.[8][9] He has two children from his first marriage and two from his second.[10] They live in Newton, Massachusetts.[11][12]

Koch is unrelated to Stone Brewing Co. cofounder Greg Koch.[13]

Works cited

  • Koch, James (2016). Quench Your Own Thirst: Business lessons learned over a beer or two. New York: Flatiron Books. ISBN 978-1-250-07050-0. LCCN 2015046334.
gollark: Well, you can't say "yes this is under the GPL" but also "by the way you also can't do these things which the GPL lets you do".
gollark: Also, it has versions.
gollark: I suspect your foreword thing might actually be incompatible with that.
gollark: Then you would need to explicitly release it under some free software license. Which yours might not be.
gollark: Actually, the way it works is that if you program something/make some sort of creative work, you own the "intellectual property rights" or whatever to it (there's a time limit but it constantly gets extended), and have to explicitly release it as public domain/under whatever conditions for it to, well, be public domain/that.

References


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