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位高而权微的十大CEO 2012-05-08 06:59:21

     美国的企业巨头,世界商界的大鳄,其CEO居然没有多大的“权势”,你相不相信?而且,拥有如此“熊样”CEO的公司,居然还经营的相当不错。

 

这样一来,就让我想到了值得自问的几个问题:

这样的事情能够发生在美国,是不是能够发生在中国呢?为什么不能?从这样的“格局”,我们能够读出什么样的企业文化的差异?又能够读出什么样的文化和文明差别?为什么中国的大股东们,那么在乎控制?不控制行不行?为什么不行?为什么中国企业的职业经理人就那么不值得人们信赖?中国五千年文明打造的,到底有多少值得我们自豪的东西还依然存在着?难道就是那些可以换着不同法子,让人们一代代的去一再“回味”的宫廷剧吗?

再者,从投资者的角度看,公司CEO的权力大小,对于公司的经营,到底是好事还是坏事?一家良好运行的公司,最重要的,到底是企业领导者的权力显示,还是良好的运行构架和对这种架构的尊重?也就是说,公司是靠制度运行好,还是靠人为的管理好?

十多年之前,我初做企业的时候,一直困扰我的问题之一就是:作为企业的领导者,你手里的权力到底应该怎么样使用?在你拥有“生杀大权”的时候,你该怎么样尊重和对待那些没有多少权力的“弱者”?

很多人喜欢权力,也喜欢显示自己手里的权力。中国人对于权力,好像还更为在乎和得意。于是乎,在一个个场合,我们就能看到牛哄哄的不乐意让人低看的“领导者”。于是乎,“显摆”,就成为领导者必须有的派头之一,就成为中国领导文化的核心内容了。

接下来,似乎就是:只有有派头的天才,才能够领导好一家企业和机构。同时,只要我在领导位置,我也就自然成为天才了。造神文化,好像在今天的中国,还是依然的根深蒂固,颇有市场。

而这种自以为是的天才感觉,又正是巴菲特老人最不看重的:一家企业,如果只有天才才能够管理好的话,那么,你最好是不要投资它。因为世界上天才毕竟太少太稀罕!

对于企业经营,我倒是挺喜欢日本人的那种强调团队合作,强调忠诚的企业文化。不喜欢中国目前很多企业在炫耀的“狼性文化”。强化雇员之间的相互竞争和倾轧,结果就是对自私自利意识的强化。最终养出的狼,不仅会吃掉同伴,也会吃掉你这个养狼的人。

一家企业的文化,归根到底是企业CEO的文化。如果没有一大批拥有谦卑心态的领导者,像中国这样的一个大国,又怎么能打造出征服世界的,强大无比,同时又拥有谦卑心态的团队呢?没有谦卑心态的团队,最终又能够强大到哪里呢?

 

The Least Powerful CEOs in America

May 2, 2012 by 247wallst

It is not unusual for large American public companies to be controlled by a founder, a founding family or a corporation that bought out the large majority of shareholders at some time in the past. In the case of all of these companies, the shareholder should not be fooled into thinking anyone other than the controlling shareholder ultimately decides who runs the company and how. The chief executives on the “Least Powerful CEOs in America” list serve at the whim of controlling shareholders, regardless of how well or how poorly they do for the company’s other shareholders.

Most of the companies with a controlling shareholder are ones in which the founder or founding family had all of the ownership before the company became public. In some cases these founders kept all voting shares for themselves at the time of the initial public offering. In other cases, they kept enough to still have much larger stakes than any other holders. The best example of the evolution from owning all of a company to owning voting control is Walmart (NYSE: WMT). Sam Walton founded the company. He kept the controlling block of shares when it went public. His family retained control after his death and still does.

The fact that a CEO can be dismissed for reasons other than performance does not appear to affect how well these chief executives do. Current Walmart CEO Michael Duke may be the worst chief executive in the retailer’s history, but so far he retains the support of the founder’s family.  The Mexico bribery scandal that Walmart faces will cost shareholders money, probably in the form of large legal fees and perhaps government fines. Walmart’s stock has fallen recently due to investor concerns. Duke has been a poor steward. At the other end of the spectrum is Fabrizio Freda, who runs Estee Lauder (NYSE: EL). The company set a record for both profits and revenue last year. Shares are up 100% in just two years. Still, nothing would keep the Lauder family from dismissing Freda — should they choose to — despite those successes.

24/7 Wall St. reviewed the corporate structure, governance and voting rights of the 500 largest companies by market cap. Based on a review of company proxies, we identified those companies in which someone other than the CEO had voting control of the company. We then limited the universe to those companies with market cap in excess of $5 billion.

Wall St.’s least powerful CEOs in America.

1. Walmart
> Name: Michael Duke (Age: 62)
> Title: Chief Executive
> Controlling Shareholder: The Walton family
> Controlling Block: The 49.5% of “direct” and “indirect” voting shares

Michael Duke is in enough trouble already. He has only been Walmart’s CEO since early 2009, when the company pushed out H. Lee Scott, Jr., who is still on the board. Over the past two weeks, a huge bribery scandal at the corporation’s Mexico operations has begun to threaten the company’s image. The scandal may make it harder for the world’s largest retailer to do business in several countries, including the United States. Walmart has begun to move into large cities, a move local retailers often resist. The Mexico scandal will give these smaller retailers more firepower as they lobby local government. A number of shareholders and activist groups have called for Duke and Walmart chairman S. Robson Walton to step down. Walton can resist the requests because of his family’s control of the corporation. Duke is a likely candidate to be sacrificed because he allegedly knew about the trouble in Mexico. Walmart’s CEO is among the most visible in the world. The retailer employs 2.2 million people around the world and is one of its largest companies based on revenue, which should reach $450 billion this year. Even if Duke is forced to leave, he has had some good years financially. His compensation in each of the past three fiscal years has been more than $18 million.

2. Nike
> Name: Mark G. Parker (Age: 56)
> Title: Chief Executive
> Controlling Shareholder: Philip Knight, founder and chairman
> Controlling Block: 74.6% of Class A, 17.8% of Class B

Mark Parker, 55, has been the CEO of Nike (NYSE: NKE) since 2006. Philip Knight, the company’s founder and board member since 1968, must like what Parker has accomplished because Knight has voting control of the company. Since Parker took over, annual revenue has gone from $15 billion to $20.8 billion. Net income has increased from $1.4 billion to $2.1 billion. Nike’s share price has risen more than 150% over the same period. It has continued to consolidate its position at the top of the sports apparel and footwear market in the past half decade. Well-regarded research firm Morningstar recently wrote: “Nike remains the largest and most dominant player in the athletic footwear and apparel category, which it has helped revolutionize during the last 40 years.” Parker has only been paid modestly to run a company with sales as large as Nike’s. He made $11.3 million last year and $13.2 million in 2010. The importance of Knight’s holdings is indicated in Nike’s 10-K filed with the SEC: “The sale of a large number of shares held by our Chairman could depress the market price of our common stock.” Nike has 485 million shares outstanding.

3. Dish Network
> Name: Joseph P. Clayton (Age: 62)
> Title: Director, President, and Chief Executive
> Controlling Shareholder: Charles W. Ergen
> Controlling Block: 98.2% of Class B common

Charles Ergen cofounded Dish Network (NASDAQ: DISH) with his wife, Cantey Ergen, and James DeFranco, in 1980. Together they own a 98% controlling block. Joseph Clayton, who has been the company’s CEO since mid-2011, is an industry veteran. He was paid $9.8 million for the year. Clayton has been chairman of Sirius XM (NASDAQ: SIRI) and sat on the board of directors of EchoStar (NASDAQ: SATS). Like cable, satellite television was introduced in the 1980s as an alternative to major TV network programming. Dish and DirecTV (NASDAQ: DTV) have been the two successes that emerged from 30 years of company launches, failures and mergers. The Dish subscriber count is currently just short of 14 million. The key to success in the industry has been breadth of programming. Dish has 230 basic video channels, a large number of premium sports and movie packages, and more than 3,000 local channels. Clayton appears to be the right choice to run the company at the right time. His background in satellite delivery and content acquisition is essential to the video-program-to-the-home industry, which has become extremely crowded in the past five years. Both the large telephone companies and startups like Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) compete directly now with the cable and satellite incumbents.

4. Viacom
> Name: Philippe P. Dauman (Age: 58)
> Title: President and Chief Executive
> Controlling Shareholder: Sumner Redstone, executive chairman
> Controlling Block: 79.5% of Class A common

Sumner Redstone has fired several well-regarded CEOs. These include Frank Biondi, who ran Viacom (NASDAQ: VIAB) until 1996, and Thomas Freston, who was CEO until 2006. Shortly before he sacked Feston, Redstone said, “I, for one, am very encouraged by the progress we have made financially and operationally, particularly in moving our powerful brands to promising new platforms.” He added, “The way Tom and I look at it, at least for the time being, we like the company exactly as it is.” It is good to be the king. If current CEO Philippe Dauman loses his job, he will leave Viacom as a very rich man. His total compensation in 2011 was $43.1 million in 2011 and $84.5 million in 2010. He was one of the highest paid public company CEOs in each year. Given Redstone’s position, he must have blessed those packages. Based on share price performance, Dauman can claim he is due at least part of the bounty. Viacom shares are up 30% over the past two years. Shareholders have been told that the buyer should beware of how Viacom is controlled. The company’s SEC filings list this control as a “risk factor.” Through National Amusements and its affiliates,which Redstone owns, he controls 80% of the Viacom Class A shares. “NAI’s voting control of us allows it to control the outcome of corporate actions that require stockholder approval, including the election of directors and transactions involving a change in control” according to the company’s 10-K filing.

5. Sears Holdings
> Name: Louis J. D’Ambrosio (Age: 48)
> Title: Chief Executive
> Controlling Shareholder: Edward S. Lampert, chairman of the board
> Controlling Block: 61.0% of common stock

Ed Lampert engineered the merger of Sears and Kmart in 2005. The financial results have been a disaster most years since then. Lampert may finally have picked a long-term CEO to turn the company around after several efforts. Louis D’Ambrosio was appointed CEO in February 2011. It took a long time for Lampert to make his decision. Interim chief executive W. Bruce Johnson held the job from early 2008 until D’Ambrosio joined, at which point Johnson was demoted. Lampert and his management have not been able to create a formula that draws shoppers from large department stores and big-box retailers like Walmart and Target (NYSE: TGT). Consequently, same-store sales at Sears and Kmart drop most months. The two brands also have only modest presences online compared to the leaders Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) and walmart.com. These failures to draw both brick-and-mortar as well as Internet consumers has caused analysts to believe that Sears Holdings (NASDAQ: SHLD) is too far gone to turn around. If D’Ambrosio is pushed out by Lampert, he has the comfort of having made $9.9 million in 2011. Sears characterizes Lampert’s power in its SEC filings as follows: “Affiliates of our Chairman, whose interests may be different than your interests, exert substantial influence over our Company.”

6. Estee Lauder
> Name: Fabrizio Freda (Age: 55)
> Title: President and Chief Executive
> Controlling Shareholder: Ronald S. Lauder, chairman emeritus, directly and through a series of trusts
> Controlling Block: 51.6% of voting power

Ronald Lauder ran the family’s cosmetics business as CEO from 1982 through 1999. He joined the company in 1958. Estee Lauder was started by his mother and his father, Joseph, in 1935. Fabrizio Freda has been paid well to run Estee Lauder since he became its most recent CEO in 2009. He made $21.4 million in 2011. But Freda can make a good case to his boss and to shareholders that he has done a good job regardless of who actually employs him. Shares in Estee Lauder have risen close to 100% in the past two years. The company had record revenue of $8.8 billion in fiscal 2011 and record net income of over $700 million. Estee Lauder is an example of a company that has done exceedingly well for shareholders despite them not having a voting stake in the company. In its last 10-K filing to the SEC, the company said about its voting power: “We are controlled by the Lauder family.”

Douglas A. McIntyre

 

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· 人工智能有助中国走向民主化吗?
· 中学为体,西学为用,是个啥玩意
· 坚持无产阶级专政,如何执行?
· 关进笼子的:权力 vs 思想
· 神一般的坚持:四项基本原则
· 近代中国的屈辱历史从鸦片战争开
· 解放军攻打台湾:理性与后果
· 三十五年前六四镇压,付出的代价
· 1840年代的中美比较
· 中国的特别国债:强征还是忽悠
【我的书架】
· 今年诺奖得主的代表作《逃离》全
· 《乔布斯的商战》(目录)
· 《乔布斯的商战》出版,感谢读者
· 张五常:人民币在国际上升值会提
· 《博弈华尔街》,让你再一次感悟
· 《危机与败局》目录
· 《危机与败局》出版发行
· 下雪的早晨 (艾青)
· 《奥巴马智取白宫》被选参加法兰
· 下架文章
【《战神林彪传》】
· 《战神林彪传》第二章 (2)
· 《战神林彪传》第二章(1)
· 《战神林彪传》第一章(5)
· 《战神林彪传》第一章(4)
· 《战神林彪传》第一章(3)
· 《战神林彪传》第一章(2)
· 《战神林彪传》第一章(1)
【《犹太经商天才》】
· 《犹太经商天才》: 2.生不逢时
· 第一章:苦命的孩子(1)
【阿里巴巴与雅虎之战】
· 福布斯:马云和他的敌人们
· 阿里巴巴与雅虎之战(2)
· 阿里巴巴与雅虎之战(1)
【《哈佛小子林书豪》】
· 从林书豪身上学到的人生十课之一
· 《哈佛小子林书豪》之二
· 《哈佛小子林书豪》之一
【华裔的战歌】
· 印度裔和华裔在孩子教育上的差异
· 犹太人和华裔教育孩子的特点和异
· 中国不应对骆家辉抱太大的幻想
· 华裔政界之星——刘云平(2)
· 华裔政界之星——刘云平(1)
· 心安则身安,归不归的迷思
· 华裔的战歌(5):谁造就了"
· 华裔的战歌(4):关注社会与被
· 华裔的战歌(3):“全A”情结与失
· 华裔的战歌(2):犹太裔比我们
【国美大战】
· 企业版的茉莉花革命与公司政治
· 国美之战,不得不吸取的十条教训
· 谁来拯救国美品牌
· 国美股权之争:两个男人的战争
· 现在是投资国美的最佳时机吗?
· “刺客”邹晓春起底
· 邹晓春:已经做好最坏的打算
· 愚昧的陈晓与窃笑的贝恩
· 贝恩资本的真面目(附图片)
· 陈晓为什么“勾结”贝恩资本
【《乔布斯的故事》】
· 苹果消息跟踪:如果苹果进入电视
· 乔布斯故事之十四:嬉皮士
· 乔布斯的故事之十三 犹太商人
· 乔布斯的故事之十二:禅心
· 乔布斯的故事之十一:精神导师
· 乔布斯故事之十:大学选择
· 乔布斯的故事之九:个性的形成
· 乔布斯的故事之八:吸食大麻
· 乔布斯的故事之七:胆大妄为
· 乔布斯的故事之六:贪玩的孩子
【中国美容业】
· 国内日化品牌屡被收购 浙江本土
· 外资日化品牌再下一城 丁家宜外
· 强生收购大宝 并购价刷新中国日
· 从两千元到一百亿的寻梦之路
【加盟店经营】
· 转载:太平洋百货撤出北京市场
· Franchise Laws Protect Investo
· Groupon拒绝谷歌收购内幕
· GNC 到底值多少钱?
· 杨国安对话苏宁孙为民:看不见的
· 张近东:苏宁帝国征战史
· 连锁加盟店成功经营的四大要素
· 加盟店经营管理的五大核心问题
· 高盛抢占新地盘 10月将入股中国
【《解读日本》】
· 东京人不是冷静 是麻木冷漠!
· 日本灾难给投资者带来怎样的机会
· 日本地震灾难对世界经济格局的影
· 美国对日本到底信任几何?
· 大地震带来日元大升值的秘密
· 日本原来如此不堪一击
· 灾难面前的日本人民(3)
· 灾难面前的日本人民(2)
· 灾难面前的日本人民(1)
【《乔布斯的商战》】
· 苹果给你上的一堂价值投资课
· 纪念硅谷之父诺伊斯八十四岁诞辰
· 乔布斯的商战(6): 小富靠勤、中
· 乔布斯的商战(5): 搏击命运,机
· 乔布斯的商战(4):从巨富到赤
· 乔布斯的商战(1):偶然与必然
· 让成功追随梦想:悼念乔布斯
【《鹞鹰》(谍战小说,原创)】
· 《鹞鹰》(谍战小说,原创)
【盛世危言】
· 美国长期信用等级下调之后?
· 建一流大学到底缺什么?
· 同样是命,为什么这些孩子的就那
· 中国式“贫民富翁”为何难产
· 做人,你敢这厶牛吗?
· 言论自由与第一夫人变猴子
· “奈斯比特现象”(下)
· “奈斯比特现象”(上)
· 理性从政和智慧当官
· 中国对美五大优势
【第一部 《逃离》】
· 朋友,后会有期
· 师兄,人品低劣
· 开心,老友相见
· 拯救,有心无力
· 别了,无法回头
· 对呀,我得捞钱
· 哭吧,烧尽激情
· 爱情,渐行渐远
· 再逢,尴尬面对
· 不错,真的成熟
【《毒丸》(谍战)】
· 毒丸(13)
· 毒丸(12)
· 毒丸(11)
· 毒丸(10)
· 毒丸(9)
· 毒丸(8)
· 毒丸(7)
· 毒丸(6)
· 毒丸(5)
· 毒丸(4)
【《美国小镇故事》】
· 拜金女(五):免费精子
· 拜金女(四):小女孩的忧伤
· 拜金女(三):丑小鸭变白天鹅
· 拜金女(二):艰难移民路
· 拜金女(一):恶名在外
· 拯救罗伯特(四之四)
· 奇葩的穆斯林(下)
· 奇葩的穆斯林(上)
· 拯救罗伯特(四之三)
· 拯救罗伯特(四之二)
【《追风》(战争小说)】
· 追风:第二十五章
· 追风:第二十四章
· 追风:第二十三章
· 追风:第二十二章
· 追风:第二十一章
· 追风:第二十章
· 追风:第十九章
· 追风:第十八章
· 追风:第十七章
· 追风:第十六章
【菜园子】
· 春天到了,你的大蒜开长了吗?(
· 春天到了,该种韭菜了
· 室内种花,注意防癌
· 我的美国菜园子(3)
· 我的美国菜园子(2)
· 我的美国菜园子(1)
【科幻小说:幽灵对决】
· 幽灵对决:异象与联盟
· 幽灵对决:意识的纠缠
· 科幻小说:幽灵对决: 首次攻击
【魏奎生 作品】
· 童年记忆
· 那年,那月,那思念
· 故乡的老宅
【《爱国是个啥?》】
· 爱国(1): 爱国心是熏陶出来的
【美国投资移民】
· 美国投资移民议题(2)
· 美国投资移民议题(1)
【理性人生】
· 关于汽车保险,你不能不知的
· 感恩之感
· 失败男人背后站着怎样的女人(2
· 什么是男人的成功?
· 失败男人背后站着怎样的女人(1
· 转载:巴菲特的财富观
· 痛悼79年湖北高考理科状元蒋国兵
【《格林伯格传》】
· 114亿人民币的损失该怪谁
· 基于避孕套的哲理
· 成功投资八大要领
· 企业制度的失败是危机的根源
· 斯皮策买春,错在哪?
【《奥巴马大传》】
· 一日省
· 追逐我的企盼
· 保持积极乐观的生活态度
· 陌生的微笑
· 奥巴马营销角度谈心理
· 神奇小子奥巴马
· 相信奇迹、拥抱奇迹、创造奇迹
· 什么样的人最可爱:献给我心中的
· 希拉里和奥巴马将帅谈
· 是你教会了别人怎样对待你
【参考文章】
· 美国最省油的八种汽车
· 美国房市最糟糕的十大州
· 美国历史上最富有的十位总统
· 世界十大债务大国
· 新鲜事:巴菲特投资IBM
· 星巴克的五美元帮助产生就业机会
· 转载: 苹果前CEO:驱逐乔布斯非
· 华尔街日报:软件将吃掉整个世界
· 林靖东: 惠普与乔布斯的“后PC时
· 德国是如何成为欧洲的中国的
【开博的领悟】
· 打造强国需要不同声音
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