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It's Good
to Be the Boss
Female
chief executives are taking charge at a slew of corporate
giants. Call it the year of the Most Powerful Woman CEO.
By Patricia Sellers
October
30, 2006
PepsiCo.
Xerox. eBay. ADM. Kraft Foods. Sara Lee. Avon. The list of
brand-name companies with women chief executives is longer
and more impressive than ever, after a year of stunning breakthroughs
in corner-office hiring. The first big surprise landed in
the spring, when $37-billion-a-year Archer Daniels Midland
wooed former Chevron exec Pat Woertz to take over. In June
came the next shocker: Kraft Foods, which three years ago
had failed to offer enough growth opportunities to keep rising
star Irene Rosenfeld from walking away, persuaded her to return
as CEO after a dynamic run at Frito-Lay. But the biggest news
hit in the heat of August when PepsiCo unexpectedly announced
that CEO Steve Reinemund would be stepping down. The front-runner
to succeed him, most observers assumed, was an American man,
Mike White, who had turned around Pepsi's international operations.
Yet Pepsi's board defied the stereotypes, instead tapping
Indian-born strategist Indra Nooyi. She had served as president
and CFO since 2001 but had never run a line business at Pepsi—as
naysayers had long pointed out. Still, by promoting herself
as a visionary she won the board's support.
"It's
a game-changing year," notes CEO recruiter Joie Gregor
of Heidrick & Struggles. Indeed, it could be called the
year of the Most Powerful Woman CEO. The top seven positions
on Fortune's 2006 Most Powerful Women list are held
by CEOs. Among the list's nine newcomers are Paula Rosput
Reynolds (No. 40), who took charge at insurer Safeco last
January, and Carol Meyrowitz (No. 26), who will take the helm
at TJX, America's largest off-price retailer, next January.
Then there are the CEOs in waiting. Susan Arnold (No. 10),
whose health and beauty brands generate $29 billion of Procter
& Gamble's $68 billion in revenues, is a top candidate
to succeed chief A.G. Lafley. Ursula Burns (No. 27), who runs
the vast majority of Xerox's operations, is in line to replace
CEO Anne Mulcahy (No. 2) when she retires. Pat Russo now has
the top spot on our international Most Powerful Women list,
after merging her company, Lucent, with French telecom giant
Alcatel and winning the CEO job.
Of course,
a few women tumbled off their pedestals. Karen Katen failed
to win the top job at Pfizer and left the company. Anne Stevens,
who headed Ford's Americas division, quit in September. And
Pattie Dunn certainly had an ignoble fall from grace at Hewlett-Packard.
Meanwhile, CEOs Brenda Barnes at Sara Lee and Andrea Jung
at Avon (both of whom dropped in our ranking) are struggling
to make big restructurings work. Still, by the key criteria
Fortune uses in assembling the list—the size,
importance, and health of each business in the global economy,
and the momentum of each woman's career (along with her social
and cultural influence)—there's no question that the
power of women in the corporate sphere is rising.
Reinventing
PepsiCo
Look
no further than the new No. 1 on our list, Indra Nooyi at
PepsiCo (eBay's Meg Whitman, who topped the rankings the past
two years, slips to No. 3). The daughter of a banker and a
housewife in southern India, Nooyi, 50, grew up in a middle-class
environment where "if you didn't get a 100 on your test,
you failed," she recalled in a speech a few years ago.
She graduated from Madras Christian College at 18, earned
her MBA at the Indian Institute of Management at 20 and three
years later moved to the U.S. to attend Yale, where she picked
up a master's in public and private management. Unable to
afford a business suit, she wore a traditional Indian sari
to an interview at Booz Allen Hamilton, which hired her as
a summer intern. She moved on to strategy roles at Boston
Consulting Group, Motorola, and Asea Brown Boveri.
Her first
years at PepsiCo (as SVP of strategic planning) were grim.
In 1996, Pepsi's international drinks business imploded because
of overexpansion, and CEO Wayne Calloway died of cancer. But
Nooyi hung in there—and exploited new opportunities.
During the next five years she worked hand in hand with Calloway's
successor, Roger Enrico, on $35 billion worth of deals, including
spin-offs and divestitures. "I'd sit in meetings and
try to be real macho and dehumanize these decisions,"
she said at Fortune's 2002 Most Powerful Women Summit.
"Then I'd go into my office and close the door and shed
a few tears, thinking, God, why can't I just be building?
I struggled with this for many years. Then we bought Quaker
Oats, and it was like giving birth, adding people."
Bold
proof that powerful women need not tone down their style to
get ahead, Nooyi has relished standing out from ordinary executives—especially
the guys. "There is no question that women who reach
the top have to perform at a higher level," she told
Fortune a few years ago. (PepsiCo says it isn't making
Nooyi available to any media until she has settled into her
new job.) Once a member of a female rock band, she has been
known to sing at company parties and plays electric guitar—though
there's no time for that these days. The only thing that Nooyi,
a mother of two daughters, does not pursue with gusto may
be balance. "I work hard or work harder," she has
said, classifying the concept of balance, at least as it applies
to her, as "for the birds."
Her unbridled
ambition and strident views put off some people. She has long
dismissed the criticism about her lack of line experience.
"The job I'm doing, to call it a nonoperating job is
crazy," she told Fortune in 2004, when as CFO
and president she oversaw Pepsi-Co's IT systems and supply
chain. "It's damn difficult," she added.
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