Patrick Liotard Vogt is moving from Zurich to New York. He went to school at rich kids’ school Le Rosey in Rolle, so we can probably safely assume that he spends time on roads between Zurich and Geneva. The very-rich jet-setting 25-year-old who says he is involved with some 40 companies (he’s chairman of Poken, a startup I know and like, founded by IMD graduate Stéphane Doutriaux). The Huffington Post carries a lengthy interview with him. The last line caught my eye: he likes to drive too fast. So that’s who is in one of those cars zooming past on the autoroute.
And another line: “I come from a family that is more about being successful than being rich. We always learned that if you give something you have to get something. My great grandfather was the CEO and Chairman of Nestle. He started at the bottom and worked his way up. That’s very motivating.”
I had to read that quote a couple times to make sure I had it the right way around: it’s not about philanthropy.
GenevaLunch, 16 October 2009.
Filed under: Business, Society
Tags: Geneva, Huffington Post, Institut Le Rosey, interview, Nestle, Patrick Liotard Vogt, Poken, Rolle, Stephane Doutriaux, Zurich
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October 16th, 2009 at 5:00 pm
Holly Ravioli !! I’ve been taught to always give and not expect to receive !! That’s probably one of the reasons I was not born Nestlé’s founder great granddaughther……
November 1st, 2009 at 11:12 am
Give the guy a break. His middle name is Liotard.