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Intro | American businesswoman | |
Places | United States of America | |
is | Businessperson Television personality Broadcaster Business executive | |
Work field | Business Film, TV, Stage & Radio Journalism | |
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Biography
Rose Marcario is the CEO of outdoor apparel company Patagonia. She joined the company in 2008 as CFO, and Patagonia's profits have tripled since then. After she was hired, she evaluated Patagonia's production processes and revised them to be more environmentally friendly, by eliminating waste and excess packaging materials.
Prior to joining Patagonia, Marcario spent 15 years in private equity. She earned a BS in Business and Finance from the University of Albany and an MBA at California State University, Los Angeles. She currently serves on the Board of Trustees at Naropa University.
Employee child care facilities
Marcario has been a vocal supporter of on-site child care, which Patagonia established in 1983. Under her leadership, 100 percent of the company's working mothers have returned to work after giving birth. On June 1, 2017, Marcario opened an on-site child care facility at Patagonia's distribution center in Reno, Nevada. Marcario believes that employer-operated child care facilities are the answer to getting more women on company boards and in CEO positions.
Politics
In February, 2016, Marcario and Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard made a public statement about the company's commitment to public lands by choosing to withdraw the company's participation from the annual Outdoor Retailer show trade show. The show was hosted in Salt Lake City, Utah, and Marcario and Chouinard said they were protesting Utah Governor Gary Herbert's attempts to rescind the Bears Ears National Monument. Marcario is often a spokeswoman for Patagonia's stance on public lands, and other outdoor industry companies often follow the lead of Patagonia. Her decision to use the company's participation in Outdoor Retailer as a bargaining tool to change Herbert's stance on public lands spurred a boycott of the trade show, which put the $887 billion outdoor recreation industry into the national spotlight. Marcario and Patagonia said the brand would boycott the show, one of Salt Lake City's most profitable annual conventions, unless the state's elected officials backed down on their efforts to rescind Bears Ears. Many other companies said they, too, would boycott the show in solidarity with Patagonia, which caused Outdoor Retailer and the Outdoor Industry Association to seek a new home for the show in a state deemed more friendly to public lands.
Patagonia has sought to mobilize its customers over Trump's executive order to reduce some national monuments, particularly Bears Ears National Monument, and has sued the Trump administration over the matter.
Marcario closed Patagonia's doors on Election Day in 2016 to raise awareness about the importance of voting. Four days after the inauguration of President Donald Trump, she spoke out against the Trump administration in defense of public lands and the fight against climate change.