Thursday, October 25, 2012

At The Head Of Ronald’s Crew

The story of Jan Fields, the president of McDonald’s USA, LCC is very inspiring. She started out as a crew member in 1978. Today Jan is in charge of the strategic direction and overall business performance of all the McDonald’s restaurant in the U.S. which totals 14,000.

From cooking fries to sitting on the chair where the company’s founder once sat has been a long steady climb and did not happen overnight. Being a woman Jan had to juggle her priorities but still moved forward with her career. She considers herself a mother, grandmother and a wife which aside for her great job all required some form of sacrifices along the way.
She spoke of that fact the one can have everything but not at the same time. She passed on a number of opportunities to advance her career so that her daughter could finish her high school in one place. Yet everything has worked out in the end.

Starting with fries she knows the company very well having worked at all levels from restaurants to management.  Among the key positions she has held on her way to the top include as president and senior vice president of McDonald’s Central Division and regional vice president of the Pittsburgh region.
On the civic side she serves on the board of United Cerebral Palsy, the Chicago Urban League, and other organizations.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

James T. Hackett: Leading One Of The Largest Independent Gas And Oil Companies

Anadarko Petroleum Corporation was in need of direction. While many companies hire internally quite a good number also hire externally. Hiring an outsider has its cons like the new guy may end up not working well with insiders. It has its pros like you can get the best talent around if you have a larger pool to choose from.

Anadarko seems to have made the best decision in hiring an outsider since he has given the company new direction and has provided consistent profits year after year.  James T. Hackett was their choice. He may have been a company outsider at the time but he was and is a deep insider of the oil and gas industry having spent most of his career in that sector.
James was appointed CEO of Anadarko in 2003 as well as company president. He has made the company leaner and stronger. Three years after joining Anadarko he made an audacious move by acquiring two other energy companies involving a total of $21 billion. This move helped solidify Anadarko’s status as on one of the largest independent oil and natural gas exploration and product companies in the entire world.

For his achievements he became chairman of the board in 2006 and since May 2012 has been the executive chairman of Anadarko. Before joining the company James had been involved in the energy industry for a long time with a very impressive resume. He had been the head of a number of companies who were products of mergers.
Prior to joining Anadarko James was the president and COO of Devon Energy Corporation after it had merged with Ocean Energy where he was the chairman, president and CEO.  Ocean Energy was actually the product of a merger with Seagull Energy Corporation where he was also the chairman, CEO and president.

While mergers often cause the dislocation of senior executives for James it has always resulted in landing the top position; a testament to his business talent and managerial skills. He has lent his expertise in other fields such as being a former chairman of the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and is vice chairman of the Baylor College of Medicine among other prestigious positions.
James earned a BS form the University of Illinois and an MBA from Harvard University.

 

Thursday, October 18, 2012

The Next Leader Of General Dynamics

In June 7, 2012 General Dynamics announced that it current CEO Jay Johnson would be retiring on December 2012 and will be succeeded by Phebe Novakovic.  Only just May 2012 she was appointed as president and COO. In less than a year in her current position she will be the head of the entire company which is one of the major defense contractors of the U.S.

General Dynamics makes everything from Army tanks to nuclear submarines. It’s an accomplishment for anyone to be able to head it. Being the first woman to head a major defense contractor is an added feather in Novakovic’s cap.
She is no stranger to matters related to the country’s defense. She was formerly a CIA official and spent around four years as a special assistant to the defense secretary. Novakovic was deputy secretary of defense from 1997 to 2001.

Then she joined General Dynamics in 2001. Novakovic has served in a number of senior positions at General Dynamics including vice president of strategic planning from October 2002 to July 2005. She then was made vice president for planning and development from July 2005 to May 2010. Novakovic was EVP for marine systems since May 2010 before becoming president and COO.
Novakovic is part of the now growing trend of women heading large corporations.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Michael Duke: Running The World’s Largest Retail Store

Michael Duke is the president and CEO of Wal-mart, the world’s largest retail store chain. It is so huge that its performance is a bell weather for the U.S. economy. To be able to head such a large organization means Duke comes with exceptional skills. He certainly does and proven in his work performance.

Unlike other CEOs Duke did not graduate from an ivy league school or hold an MBA degree. He does have an industrial engineering degree from Georgia Tech which he has applied quite successfully in his professional career.
According to Duke his career path was guided by the advice he got from a high school physics teacher who told him to go to Georgia Tech and get an industrial engineering degree. His teacher also advised him not to get into the manufacturing industry but the service industry since that’s where the future lay.  Considering it was 1967 at that time it was quite a forward looking advice.

He did follow the advice and after getting his college degree worked for Rich’s Department Store in Atlanta.  In his early years he learned to manage stores and after 10 year moved on to logistics. Rich’s later became Federated and May Department Stores. He worked for that company for 23 years.
He was hired by Wal-Mart in 1995 to handle the company’s logistics. Being such an enormous company logistics is an integral component of what defines Wal-Mart as an efficient and successful company. Duke went about and made further improvements to the logistics component.

In 2005 he was appointed vice chairman and led Wal-Mart International.  With Duke’s guidance the international business became a fast growing segment of Wal-Mart with 3,500 stores and 680,000 associates in 15 markets outside of the contiguous U.S.  This segment of Wal-Mart is a behemoth in its own right having annual sales of almost $100 billion in 2008 when Duke was heading it.
In February 2009 he finally got the top post of president and CEO of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.  Perhaps Duke’s high school physics teacher never imagined how far and high his accomplishment would be.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

It’s All About Bargains For Carol Meyrowitz

Most women are in the lookout for great bargains. There are actually branded clothes that can be bought at deep discounts when they are no longer in season or stocks levels need to be lowered. Like any woman Carol Meyrowitz is also after bargains, but it’s not just when she does shopping. It’s also when making deals with manufacturers. She after all is the CEO of TJX the top off-price retailing store in the U.S.

Carol began her career with TJX in 1983 starting out as a buyer.  Then in 1987 she started holding senior management positions with Marmaxx, Chadwick’s of Boston, and Hit or Miss until 2001. These were former divisions of TJX. Carol climbed further up the TJX hierarchy. She became executive vice president from 2001 to 2004 and then senior executive vice president from 2004 to 2005.  Carol was also president of The Marmaxx Group from 2001 to 2005.
Then her rapid rise came to an abrupt halt. From January 2005 to October 2005, her employment status changed to that of an advisor for TJX and she also did consultancy work for private equity firm, Berkshire Partners LLC.  This was actually part of her plan to look for a career outside of TJX.

TJX must have very much valued her talent; by October 17, 2005 she was appointed as president and became a member of the board of directors the following year.  On January 2007 Carol was promoted as the new CEO to TJX.
She heads a powerhouse retail chain that has over 1,700 stores. While TJX is associated with deep discounted prices, Carol has talent that the TJX board simply couldn’t discount.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Randall Stephenson: Leading AT&T

College degrees count but it’s not the only indicator for success.  People who are successful put in a lot of hard work and have a track record of achievements as they rise through the corporate ranks. A company like AT&T is more on the technology side of things. Yet it is led be someone who was into accounting and learned what he needed to know along the way.

Randall Stephenson graduated from the University of Central Oklahoma with a Bachelor of Science degree in accounting.  Later on he would also earn a Masters in Accountancy from the University of Oklahoma.  Stephenson started his corporate career with Southern Bell Telephone (SBC) in 1982.
From there he climbed the corporate ladder getting a number of leadership promotions in finance. Stephenson also got international exposure having been assigned in Mexico City as the director of finance for SBC International.  He was in charge of looking over the company’s ownership interest in Teléfonos de México. 

Stephenson then became the controller for SBC, then senior vice president for Consumer Marketing.  He became senior executive vice president and chief financial officer for SBC from 2001 to 2004. It was during this time there that the company was able to reduce its net debt from $30 billion to nearly zero in the early part of 2004. This financial condition allowed the company to make key acquisitions of AT&T wireless, AT&T Corp. and BellSouth.
From 2004 to 2007 Stephenson was the COO even through the acquisitions of AT&T and BellSouth. For all his hard work and accomplishments he got appointed as chairman and CEO of the company in 2007. SBC is now known as AT&T.  Ironically AT&T was the parent company otherwise known as Ma Bell which used to dominate the telecommunications scene in the U.S.; it was broken up and SBC and BellSouth were amount the spun off entities.

While not possessing a technology background Stephenson understands the technology game very well.  He has strengthened the company’s position as the world’s largest telecommunications company.  He also transformed the company into an international leader in mobile Internet services and IP-based business and communications solutions.
This accountant has become very astute and accomplished in the field of technology.



Thursday, October 4, 2012

Patricia Woertz: Conquering The World Of Men

We try at best to emphasize that a person is hired or promoted based on qualification; it’s hard not notice the achievements of Patricia Woertz in what is basically the world of men. 

Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1953 Woertz was often taken on summer tours by her parents to look at the business side of America. They visited an oil refinery and at another time a window factory. She also saw the headquarters of Gulf Oil and Mellon Bank.
In 1974 she graduated from Pennsylvania State University with an accounting degree. Woertz was already something of odd thumb back then. She took the job offer coming from Ernst & Young and was one of only two women comprising the 200 recruits.

One of the accounting firm’s clients was Gulf Oil Corp. who eventually hired her in 1977. Woertz proved her worth.  Even when Gulf Oil merged with Chevron she was given the critical task of looking for ways to pay down debt while divesting assets to meet federal regulatory requirements.  By 1991 Woertz became head of strategic planning at Chevron.
She then became president of Chevron Canada and later Chevron International in 1995.  In 2001, Woertz became executive vice president in charge of downstream operations when Chevron merged with Texaco. She had a rough first year in charge of 19 refineries in 180 countries. Losses caused her to act decisively including the firing of senior executives.  By 2004 profit stood at $3.25 billion.

She retired from Chevron on February 2006 only to wind up as CEO and president of Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) on April 2006; the chairmanship was added in 2007. ADM is one of the world’s largest farm-commodities processors.