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David D'Alessandro
American businessman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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David Francis D’Alessandro (born January 6, 1951) is an American businessman, marketing executive, and author.[1][2] He was formerly chairman and CEO of John Hancock Financial Services, a Fortune 200 company.[3] In 2025, D'Alessandro was named chairman for Servpro Industries, LLC, franchisor for more than 2,000 cleaning, restoration, and construction franchises across the U.S. and Canada.[4]
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Early life and education
David D’Alessandro was born January 6, 1951, in East Utica, New York.[1][5] D’Alessandro graduated from Utica College of Syracuse University in 1972 with a degree in journalism and public relations.[6]
Career
D'Alessandro worked for John Hancock from 1984 to 2004, hired initially as a marketing executive and later PR chief.[2] He was named president and COO in 1998 and chairman and CEO in 2000.[7] He oversaw the transition of the firm to a public company traded on the New York Stock Exchange.[8] Under his leadership, John Hancock became a sponsor of the Boston Marathon, the New York City Marathon, and the Olympic Games.[9][2] He led a merger between John Hancock and Manulife of Canada in 2004, after which he would become president and COO of Manulife.[8] He retired shortly thereafter.[7]
He is a former partner in the Boston Red Sox ownership group[10][11] and was appointed by Major League Baseball to the Commissioner's Special Task Force on Baseball in the 21st Century.[12]
D'Alessandro served as chairman and CEO of SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment.[13] He has commented publicly about ethics in business practices[14][15] and is the author of three best-selling books about business: Brand Warfare, Career Warfare, and Executive Warfare.[5]
He owns the restaurant Toscano,[16] in Boston's Beacon Hill neighborhood and Harvard Square in Cambridge.[17]
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Honors
- in 2001, he was named by Sporting News as one of the 100 "Most Powerful People in Sports"[18][better source needed]
- Ellis Island Medal of Honor (2009)[19] from the National Ethnic Coalition of Organizers
References
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