The Korea Times

AWS, Red Hat, Workday face leadership vacuums

- By Baek Byung-yeul baekby@koreatimes.co.kr

Amazon Web Services (AWS), Red Hat, Workday and other overseas-based IT companies are facing a leadership vacuum here as they are having a hard time filling vacant country manager positions of their Korean units, according to company officials Tuesday.

Though the Korean branches refused to reveal any details about the situation, an industry official said leadership changes at foreign firms usually occur when their parent companies have not satisfied business performanc­e requiremen­ts at overseas offices.

“As seen in many other companies, leadership changes at overseas IT firms happen frequently for different reasons. But the main causes stem from lackluster business performanc­e,” the official said.

AWS Korea’s managing director Jang Jung-wook abruptly left his post in July only about a year after he was named the new head of Amazon’s cloud computing business here in June 2018.

Jang’s resignatio­n came to the surface after he updated his Linkedin profile. A representa­tive of AWS Korea confirmed that Jang has left his post but declined to provide any details.

Red Hat, a U.S.-based Linux and cloud technology vendor, has also been looking for a new head of its Korean unit for months after Hahm Jae-kyung, who led the company since 2013, recently left his post. The company was famously acquired by IT giant IBM for $34 billion in 2018.

A Red Hat Korea official confirmed that Hahm left the company in August and Jin Jae-hyung, head of enterprise sales, is currently serving as acting CEO. “Hahm left Red Hat Korea in August and we are looking for a new head of the Korean unit,” the company official said.

Workday, a U.S.-based human resource management service provider, is also seeking a new country manager for its Korean unit as Sean H. Lee recently resigned from the chief post.

When the company entered the Korean market in February 2018, Workday appointed Lee as country manager. Lee previously worked at multinatio­nal IT firms including Samsung Electronic­s, Oracle and SAP.

“We can only confirm that Lee left the company for personal reasons and we are looking for a replacemen­t,” a Workday Korea official said, adding Rob Wells, president of Workday in Asia, is currently in charge of the Korean unit.

The company said his resignatio­n is not related to the business performanc­e.

“Since Workday entered the Korean market in 2018, we have secured numerous contracts with local companies. We are also about to conclude a mega-size deal with one of the largest conglomera­tes here so his resignatio­n is not related to business performanc­e here,” he added.

While several foreign IT firms are looking for new heads of their Korean branches, there are some companies that are not undergoing a regime change. One of the most notable examples would be Kevin Kim, who has been leading the Korean unit of a U.S.-based IT service company Dell Technologi­es. Kim, who had led EMC Korea since 2003, has been serving as chief of Dell Technologi­es Korea since EMC merged with Dell in 2016.

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