Miami Herald

Longtime chief of Zappos

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Tony Hsieh, the technology entreprene­ur and venture capitalist who built Zappos into a $1 billion Internet shoes and clothing powerhouse, died Friday. He was 46.

The cause was injuries suffered in a house fire Nov. 18 in New London, Connecticu­t, according to Megan Fazio, a spokeswoma­n for the Downtown Project in Las Vegas, a revitaliza­tion effort that Hsieh oversaw.

Hsieh (pronounced Shay) was apparently visiting family at the time. Further details were not immediatel­y available.

Hsieh stepped down as chief executive in August after 21 years with the company, which began selling shoes online in 1999.

Having sold his first company, LinkExchan­ge, an online advertisin­g network, to Microsoft in 1998 for $265 million, Hsieh became a venture capitalist and invested in a San Francisco-based retail shoe startup, then called ShoeSite.com. He quickly took over as CEO and focused his efforts on building the company into an internet giant.

Hsieh surprised the Silicon Valley world by moving the company from San Francisco to a suburb of Las Vegas, where he built a culture of “fun and a little weirdness” that resulted in skyrocketi­ng growth. From $1.6 million in sales in 2000, Zappos surpassed $1 billion in revenues by 2009. In July 2009, Hsieh sold the company for $1.2 billion to Amazon.

During his tenure at Zappos, Hsieh launched the Downtown Project, aimed at revitalizi­ng the once-neglected downtown of Las Vegas and turning it into a vibrant area where Zappos employees would live. The effort grew beyond Hsieh’s original concept, and the area has attracted thousands of technology workers and entreprene­urs.

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