Dollar Tree

Who are Dollar Tree's decision-makers?

Dollar Tree's top decision-makers include Michael C. Creedon Jr., Chief Executive Officer; Stewart Glendinning, Chief Financial Officer; Bobby Aflatooni, Chief Information Officer. Real buying decisions are distributed across business units, finance, procurement, IT, security, operations, legal, and the executive sponsor for the use case.

CEO
Michael C. Creedon Jr.
CFO/key exec
Stewart Glendinning
Founded
1986
Employees
About 65,000 after Family Dollar sale
HQ
Chesapeake, VA
Notable
Nasdaq: DLTR
  • Michael C. Creedon Jr.Chief Executive OfficerPermanent CEO since December 2024Leads post-Family Dollar focus on core Dollar Tree execution.
  • Stewart GlendinningChief Financial OfficerCFO since 2023Leads finance and transformation economics.
  • Bobby AflatooniChief Information OfficerTechnology leaderLeads IT and digital systems.
  • Mike KindyChief Supply Chain OfficerSupply-chain leaderOwns distribution and supply-chain execution.

Who leads Dollar Tree?

Michael C. Creedon Jr. serves as Chief Executive Officer; Stewart Glendinning serves as Chief Financial Officer; Bobby Aflatooni serves as Chief Information Officer; Mike Kindy serves as Chief Supply Chain Officer. The leadership page and annual filings are the best sources for current roles because public-company executive teams change as strategy and succession plans evolve.

Who actually makes buying decisions at Dollar Tree?

Buying decisions depend on the category. Technology purchases usually involve IT, security, data, finance, procurement, legal, privacy, and the operating team that owns adoption. Commercial, retail, media, network, store, or supply-chain purchases add category leaders, field operators, merchandising, engineering, compliance, and sometimes board-level oversight.

For sellers, the practical path is to identify the business owner first, then map the economic buyer, procurement path, technical approver, implementation owner, and risk reviewers.

How is Dollar Tree organized as it scales?

Dollar Tree operates with centralized corporate functions and distributed business-unit execution. Its scale means a vendor must plan for multiple stakeholders, budget cycles, pilots, security reviews, integration work, and measured rollout before a broad deployment is approved.

As of June 2026.Sources:Dollar Tree CEO announcementDollar Tree annual reports

Dollar Tree — frequently asked questions

Agent CTA Background

Revenue work. On autopilot.

Start Free TrialBuilt for revenue teams who care about quality.