Walt Disney Company

Who are Walt Disney Company's decision-makers?

Walt Disney Company's top decision-makers include Josh D'Amaro, Chief Executive Officer; Dana Walden, President and Chief Creative Officer; Hugh Johnston, Chief Financial Officer. Real buying decisions are distributed across business units, finance, procurement, IT, security, operations, legal, and the executive sponsor for the use case.

CEO
Josh D'Amaro
CFO/key exec
Dana Walden
Founded
1923
Employees
About 230,000
HQ
Burbank, CA
Notable
NYSE: DIS
  • Josh D'AmaroChief Executive OfficerCEO effective March 18, 2026Former Disney Experiences chairman leading Disney's next phase.
  • Dana WaldenPresident and Chief Creative OfficerRole effective March 18, 2026Oversees company-wide creative strategy and storytelling.
  • Hugh JohnstonChief Financial OfficerCFO since 2023Leads finance and investor communications.
  • Alan BergmanChairman, Disney Entertainment StudiosStudio leaderOversees studio entertainment assets.

Who leads Walt Disney Company?

Josh D'Amaro serves as Chief Executive Officer; Dana Walden serves as President and Chief Creative Officer; Hugh Johnston serves as Chief Financial Officer; Alan Bergman serves as Chairman, Disney Entertainment Studios. 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 Walt Disney Company?

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 Walt Disney Company organized as it scales?

Walt Disney Company 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:Disney leadershipDisney annual reports

Walt Disney Company — frequently asked questions

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