Vice Chairman
Ted Hsu
Ted Hsu is one of the original founders of ASUS and is currently serving as the Vice Chairman. Previously, he served as the Chief Strategy Officer of ASUS from 2016 to 2018.
Since the earliest years of his career, Mr. Hsu has been engaged in making significant, industry-shifting discoveries that have helped shape the IT landscape in Taiwan. Today, he utilizes his experience, wisdom and passion for technology in his new role as Vice Chairman to help realize the ASUS vision of becoming one of the world’s most admired technology companies.
In the years since he helped establish ASUS, Mr. Hsu has served the company in a variety of management roles, overseeing research and development as well as supply chain and production processes. His formal background in research and mastery of hardware and software development, combined with an innate capacity for analysis and business foresight, have enabled him to become an invaluable leader for the company and for the greater IT community in Taiwan. His extraordinary depth and breadth of knowledge across all aspects of the business continue to be a vital resource for ASUS.
In 2002, Mr. Hsu helped ASUS enter the global midrange motherboard market, setting the company on a path to becoming the No. 1 motherboard brand in the world. Following the separation of the ASUS original design manufacturing (ODM) and original equipment manufacturing (OEM) businesses in 2008, Mr. Hsu became Vice Chairman of Pegatron*. After nearly a decade of leading the transformation of Pegatron into one of the most successful OEM businesses in the world, Mr. Hsu returned to the brand he co-founded, to rekindle his passion for IT and innovation.
Mr. Hsu holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Electronics Engineering from National Taiwan University and an Executive Master in Business Administration degree from National Chiao Tung University.
Mr. Hsu enjoys golf, spending time with his family, and in-depth conversations about the future of technology with his friends.
* ASUS and Pegatron are separate, unrelated entities.