Donald Knauss
Quick Facts
Biography
Donald R. Knauss (born 1951) is an executive business leader who has worked in top level positions in a variety of industries.
Current executive roles
Knauss holds key roles at three companies: Clorox Company (Director and Chairman of the Board), McKesson Corporation (independent director), URS Corporation (Director) and Kellogg Company (Director). In addition, in 2014 he was appointed to the newly created position at Clorox of Executive Chairman. While CEO at Clorox, Knauss led the 2007 purchase of Burt’s Bees for $925m, which was in response to the firm’s sluggish growth in other areas.
Knauss was also Chief Executive Officer of Clorox. According to Forbes he received $21.8 million compensation from 2007 to 2012; $6.37m renumeration in 2012 making him the 11th highest earning CEO in Household & Personal Products. In November 2014 he handed over to Benno Dorer, who had until that point had been Executive VP and Chief Operating Officer, Cleaning, International and Corporate Strategy.
In the fiscal year of 2014, with Knauss in these executive roles, Clorox generated $5.6bn.
Other activities
In the past, Knauss was a US Marine Corps artillery officer. Today, he is the chairman of the Board of Trustees at the University of San Diego, where he has served as a board member since 2008. He is also on the Board of Trustees of the US Marine Corps University Foundation, a member of the Economic Advisory Council At Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, and on the Board of Trustees for the University Foundation and Morehouse College. Krauss is on the Dean’s Advisory Board at the College of Arts & Sciences at Indiana University and the Board of Directors of the Grocery Manufacturers of America and the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
He also has a strong interest in baseball, being responsible for the controversial renaming of the Houston Astros' stadium after Minute Maid and campaigning to keep the Oakland Athletics in Oakland.
Biography
Knauss has a BA in History from Indiana University, graduating in 1977. After graduation, he enlisted in the Marines, initially serving in Hawaii in 1978; he left in 1981 and took up a position with Procter & Gamble.
He also worked for Frito-Lay and Tropicana, mainly in marketing, although he also was head of the southeast sales department for Frito-Lay.
Before Clorox, he was head of the North American operations of The Coca-Cola Company.