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Most Powerful Women In Corporate World 2005
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Topic: Most Powerful Women In Corporate World 2005 Posted: 12-Nov-2005 at 11:35
Hello everybody
Here I came up with the list of top 50 most powerful women in corporate world of 2005 where Meg as CEO and chairman (or chairwoman we can say here.. ) of eBay has been on top of the list for the second time.. Interestingly.. Oprah Winfrey is on the 4th rank.. and The CEO of world wide cosmetic well-known brand.. AVON is on no 5th.. check out for yourself, guys.. This may give some inspirations for all the girls out there
The rank is based on the size and importance of her business; her clout; career trajectory; and cultural and social impact.
Rank
Name
Company
Title
Age
1
Meg Whitman
eBay
Chairman and CEO
49
2
Anne Mulcahy
Xerox
Chairman and CEO
52
3
Brenda Barnes
Sara Lee
President and CEO
51
4
Oprah Winfrey
Harpo
Chairman
51
5
Andrea Jung
Avon
Chairman and CEO
47
6
Pat Woertz
Chevron
EVP, Global Downstream
52
7
Sallie Krawcheck
Citigroup
CFO, Head of Strategy
40
8
Abigail Johnson
Fidelity
President, Fidelity Employer Services
43
9
Karen Katen
Pfizer
Vice Chairman, President of Human Health
56
10
Judy McGrath
Viacom
Chairman and CEO, MTV Networks
52
11
Indra Nooyi
PepsiCo
President and CFO
49
12
Christine Poon
Johnson & Johnson
Vice Chairman; Worldwide Chairman, Medicines & Nutritionals
53
13
Ann Moore
Time Inc.
Chairman and CEO
55
14
Pat Russo
Lucent Technologies
Chairman and CEO
53
15
Ginni Rometty
IBM
SVP, Enterprise Business Services, IBM Global Services
48
16
Anne Sweeney
Walt Disney
Co-Chairman, Disney Media Networks; President, Disney-ABC Television
47
17
Susan Arnold
Procter & Gamble
Vice Chairman, Global Beauty Care
51
18
Ann Livermore
Hewlett-Packard
EVP, Technology Solutions Group
47
19
Zoe Cruz
Morgan Stanley
Acting President
50
20
Charlene Begley
General Electric
CEO and President, Plastics
39
21
Martha Stewart
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia
Founder
64
22
Anne Stevens
Ford Motor
COO, Americas
56
23
Susan Desmond-Hellmann
Genentech
President of Product Development
48
24
Susan Ivey
Reynolds American
President, CEO Reynolds American; Chairman, CEO, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
46
25
Amy Woods Brinkley
Bank of America
Chief Risk Officer
49
26
Shelly Lazarus
WPP
Chairman, CEO, Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide
58
27
Irene Rosenfeld
PepsiCo
Chairman and CEO, Frito-Lay
52
28
Heidi Miller
J.P. Morgan Chase
CEO, Treasury and Securities Services
51
29
Linda Dillman
Wal-Mart
EVP and CIO
49
30
Mary Minnick
Coca-Cola
EVP; President of Marketing, Strategy, and Innovation
45
31
Carol Bartz
Autodesk
Chairman, CEO, and President
57
32
Doreen Toben
Verizon
CFO
Zagros
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Posted: 12-Nov-2005 at 14:02
i thought pierre omidyar was ceo of eBay? or maybe he just founded it.
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Posted: 12-Nov-2005 at 14:07
Sorry, I dont care how much power and money this woman has, im not going to watch her.
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Posted: 13-Nov-2005 at 10:29
Lol @ cattus
Originally posted by Zagros i thought pierre omidyar was ceo of eBay? or maybe he just founded it.
you are right.. he's the founder of eBay where at first it was known as Online Auction... but then he passed CEO position to Whitman on 1998..
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Posted: 13-Nov-2005 at 11:30
oh i think these women are too busy with their works.
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Posted: 13-Nov-2005 at 12:05
Well, IMHO The following ones are good looking:
Sallie Krawcheck
Abigail Johnson
Anne Sweeney
Safra Catz
Susan Decker
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Posted: 13-Nov-2005 at 23:06
I would have to say that here in the US, the most powerful, outspoken, influential and most public woman figure is Oprah Winfrey...only because she took on the Texan cattle industry and WON, not to mention that she is high profile! That, my friends, is real POWER in the U.S. Going up against a giant industry such as the meat industry, which is headed predominantly by men, and winning is a major achievement for an African-'American woman.
Edited by morticia
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Posted: 14-Nov-2005 at 12:16
Mostly powerful American women! Where are all the European women? I think that goes to prove how much women outside the US are still being suppressed all over the world! It all begins with a good, solid education, which many women are still not getting to the full extent they deserve.
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Posted: 14-Nov-2005 at 12:57
Originally posted by morticia Mostly powerful American women! Where are all the European women? I think that goes to prove how much women outside the US are still being suppressed all over the world! It all begins with a good, solid education, which many women are still not getting to the full extent they deserve.
RELAX morty... i believe there are some women from europe and asia were listed .. here i found a list for top 50 list women to watch..
Scroll down to see a list of the 50 women to watch in these categories:
Running the Show
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Carly Fiorina
Chief Executive, Hewlett-Packard
At the helm of H-P's controversial buyout of Compaq.
2. Margaret C. Whitman
Chief Executive, eBay
Turned eBay from an online bazaar to an international powerhouse.
3. Andrea Jung
Chairman, Avon Products
Modernized Avon's business, boosted bottom line.
4. Michelle Peluso
President, CEO Travelocity
Tapped to run Travelocity at 32 after developing travel seller site59.com.
5. Anne Mulcahy
Chief Executive, Xerox
Is leading Xerox back from the brink of bankruptcy.
6. Rose Marie Bravo
Chief Executive, Burberry Group
Revamped Burberry; Is now the highest paid woman in European business
7. Anne Fudge
Chairman and CEO, Young & Rubicam
Only African-American woman to run a global advertising firm.
8. Patricia Russo
Chairman and CEO, Lucent Technologies
Only woman to run a major telecommunications company.
9. Xie Qihua
Chairwoman, Shanghai Baosteel
Heads China's largest iron and steel producer.
10. Debra A. Cafaro
President and CEO, Ventas
Took the health-care firm from insolvency to success.
11. Anne Lauvergeon
Chief Executive, Areva
Plans to take her nuclear power and waste company public.
12. Ho Ching
Executive Director and CEO, Temasek Holdings
CEO of Singapore's state investment company and also married to the Prime Minister.
13. Marjorie Scardino
Chief Executive, Pearson
Led Pearson through $7.1 billion in acquisitions to become the world's largest educational publisher.
In Line to Lead
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Karen Katen
President, Pfizer Global Pharmaceuticals
Launched Pfizer's first blood-pressure pill and anti-inflammatory medicine, as well as Zoloft, Zithromax and Norvasc years later.
2. Marjorie Magner
Chairman and CEO, Global Consumer Group, Citigroup
The first female M.B.A. hired at New York Chemical Bank; Now overseas more than 150,000 employees in 54 countries.
3. Indra Nooyi
President and CFO, PepsiCo
One of the lead negotiators on the $13.8 billion acquisition of Quaker Oats and its prized Gatorade brand.
4. Zoe Cruz
Global Head of Fixed Income, Morgan Stanley
Master of the bond world, she received $16.1 million in compensation in 2003 -- more than Morgan Stanley's CEO.
5. Brenda Barnes
President and COO, Sara Lee
She left the business world for her family six years ago, only to return as an example of the balance between work and family.
6. Sharon Allen
Chairman, Deloitte & Touche
The highest ranking female in the accounting Big Four, and an advocate for women in the workplace.
7. Susan Arnold
Vice Chairman, Proctor & Gamble
She runs all the beauty brands and is part of a three-person pool to succeed the CEO.
8. Safra Catz
Co-President, Oracle
Larry Ellison credits her with the idea behind the PeopleSoft hostile takeover.
9. Linda Cook
Group Managing Director and CEO, Shell Gas & Power
In charge of the next frontier for Shell -- expanding its global natural-gas and power business.
10. Gina Centrello
President and Publisher, Random House Publishing Group
From proofreader of legal books to publisher of William Faulkner literature, she has climbed steadily.
11. Susan Desmond-Hellmann
President, Product Development Genentech
An oncologist, she was the architect behind the company's cancer-drug development.
12. Linda Dillman
Executive Vice President, Wal-Mart Stores
The power behind Wal-Mart's use of technology, presiding over a data-storage system second only to the Pentagon's in size.
13. Fumiko Hayashi
President, BMW Tokyo
Made her way in Japan's male dominated business world by selling so many cars she couldn't be denied.
14. Ann Moore
Chairman and CEO, Time Inc.
Oversees 134 magazines that reach 300 million readers and is considered the most powerful figure in magazine publishing.
15. Sallie Krawcheck
Chief Financial Officer, Citigroup
Her latest promotion has Wall Street buzzing about whether it may lead to a higher role.
16. Jenny Ming
President, Old Navy
In just 10 years, has helped create one of America's biggest retail brands.
17. Vanessa Castagna
CEO, Stores, Catalog, Internet; J.C. Penney
A key player in Penney's turnaround after overhauling its merchandising process and centralizing its buying operations.
18. Wu Xiaoling
Deputy governor, People's Bank of China
Arguably the most influential woman in China's financial system.
19. Yang Mianmian
President, Haier Group
Helped build Haier into the leading home-appliance maker in China.
20. Mellody Hobson
President, Ariel Capital Management
Leads a firm that bills itself as the largest African-American money manager, with more than $18 billion under management.
21. Naina Lal Kidwai
Deputy CEO, India, HSBC
Has helped Indian companies raise billions at home and abroad.
22. Myrtle Potter
President of Commercial Operations, Genentech
Oversaw a major expansion at the biotech company, where revenue has almost doubled since she joined.
23. Doreen Toben
Chief Financial Officer, Verizon Communications
Executive at the nation's largest phone company, with 21 years experience in different roles.
24. Yoon Song Yee
Vice President, SK Telecom
At 28, she's the highest-ranking woman executive at South Korea's largest telecom service provider.
The Inheritors
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Abigail P. Johnson
President, Fidelity Management & Research Co.
She steered Fidelity through the share-trading scandals. Now she's trying to reverse a market-share slide at the nation's largest mutual-fund company.
2. Ana Patricia Botin
Chairwoman, Banco Espanol de Credito
A natural candidate to succeed her father at Banco Santander, she could become one of the most powerful women in global finance.
3. Shari Redstone
President, National Amusements
Expected to have a growing influence at Viacom, the media conglomerate headed by her father.
4. Maria Asuncion Aramburuzabala
Vice Chairwoman, Grupo Modelo
Has successfully built upon the fortune left by her father, who founded Mexico's leading beer company, Grupo Modelo. She is Mexico's richest woman.
5. Elizabeth Murdoch
Chairman, CEO, Shine
Daughter of Rupert Murdoch, she is making it in the media world on her own and is poised to be an executive at News Corp.
The Owners
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Oprah Winfrey
Harpo Inc.
Head of a successful media empire that includes her own TV show, O magazine and Oxygen, a women's cable network.
2. Kim Sung Joo
Sungjoo International, Sungjoo Design Tech & Distribution
Controls South Korea's two largest luxury-good retailers, with 90 outlets in the country.
3. Fredy Bush
Xinhua Financial Network
Built a China-based financial news service, which today distributes to more than 1,000 business clients globally.
4. Dolly Parton
Dollywood
Reigns over a rapidly expanding entertainment empire stretching from Florida to California with an estimated $200 million annual revenue.
The Grant Giver
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Patty Stonesifer
President and Co-Chairman, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Manages the world's largest philanthropy, with assets of $27 billion.
The Watchdogs
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Elizabeth Grossman
Acting Regional Attorney, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Led the lengthy sex-bias fight against Morgan Stanley, which resulted in a landmark $54 million settlement.
2. Amy Butte
Chief Financial Officer, NYSE
At age 36, the youngest woman ever to become an executive vice president at the Big Board.
3. Linda Chatman Thomsen
Deputy Director of Enforcement, SEC
Seen as a likely successor to the SEC's director of enforcement after overseeing the agency's probe of Enron.
i believe these ladies are from EUROPE..
Ana Patricia Botin
Chairwoman, Banco Espanol de Credito
. Rose Marie Bravo
Chief Executive, Burberry Group
Revamped Burberry; Is now the highest paid woman in European business
Edited by cahaya
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Posted: 14-Nov-2005 at 14:37
Ufff!!!! Thanks Cahaya....I was beginning to worry for a moment there!
"Morty
Trust in God: She will provide." -- Emmeline Pankhurst
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Posted: 14-Nov-2005 at 20:57
I believe your list is outdated, for one thing, it lists Carly Fiorina as number 1, when she is no longer in HP.
I think it is still biased towards the US, after all, around 90% of the women are from the US.
Heck Germany just had a Female Chancellor, I am sure they have some really important female CEOs or industry players over there? There are quite a few from Asia though.
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Posted: 15-Nov-2005 at 04:23
Originally posted by fastspawn I believe your list is outdated, for one thing, it lists Carly Fiorina as number 1, when she is no longer in HP. I think it is still biased towards the US, after all, around 90% of the women are from the US. Heck Germany just had a Female Chancellor, I am sure they have some really important female CEOs or industry players over there? There are quite a few from Asia though.
hey fastspawn.. u right.. fiorina no more on top of the latest list.. but she still being acknowledge.. The 50 Women to Watch... updated on October 31, 2005
Running The Show
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Margaret C. Whitman
President and Chief Executive, eBay
Built the Web auction company into a world-wide e-commerce marketplace
2. Brenda Barnes
Chairman and Chief Executive, Sara Lee
Instituted an overhaul plan at the struggling consumer-products maker
3. Andrea Jung
Chief Executive, Avon Products
Modernized the product line and gave the brand a younger, more sophisticated image
4. Anne M. Mulcahy
Chairman and Chief Executive, Xerox
Helped the company recover from near-death experience of a massive accounting scandal
5. Carol Bartz
Chief Executive, Autodesk
Has helped the company soar since the tech bubble burst in 2000
6. Anne Lauvergeon
Chief Executive, Areva
Teamed up with Baltimore-based Constellation Energy Group to build and operate nuclear reactors in the U.S.
7. Ho Ching
Chief Executive, Temasek Holdings
Turned Temasek into one of Asia's most aggressive since 2002
8. Marjorie Scardino
Chief Executive, Pearson
Turned Pearson into the world's largest educational publisher
9. Izumi Kobayashi
President, Merrill Lynch Japan Securities
In 2003, turned Merrill into the most profitable foreign brokerage firm in Japan
10. Marion Sandler
Co-Chief Executive, Golden West Financial
In the 1950s, was one of the few female stock-market analysts on Wall Street
11. Xie Qihua
Chairwoman, Shanghai Baosteel
Chairwoman of China's largest steel producer
12. Laurence Parisot
President, Medef
President of France's biggest employers' union
13. Clara Furse
Chief Executive, London Stock Exchange
Heads one of the world's largest, and oldest, stock markets
In Line to Lead
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Susan Arnold
Vice Chairman, Procter & Gamble
Became the first woman vice chairman of P&G
2. Zoe Cruz
Acting President, Morgan Stanley
As head of fixed income, she led the firm's 2002 re-entry into the profitable mortgage-securities business.
3. Indra Nooyi
President and Chief Financial Officer, PepsiCo
Helped spin off Pepsi's restaurant and bottling businesses and worked on the 1998 acquisition of juice maker Tropicana.
4. Angela Ahrendts
Chief Executive-designate, Burberry Group
Will join the London-based luxury label as an executive director in January
5. Laura Wright
Chief Financial Officer, Southwest Airlines
Steered the company's lauded fuel-hedging program
6. Susan Desmond-Hellmann
Chief of Product Development, Genentech
Will oversee the submission of 10 new regulatory filings with the Food and Drug Administration over the next several months
7. Karen Katen
Vice Chairman, Pfizer
Simultaneously named president of the newly created human-health group, and vice chairman.
8. Sallie Krawcheck
Chief Financial Officer, Citigroup
Responsible for the banks' investor relations, mergers and acquisitions, and strategic planning
9. Ann Moore
Chairman and Chief Executive, Time Inc.
The most powerful executive in the magazine business
10. Safra Catz
Co-President, Oracle
Took the lead in integrating Oracle's $10.6 billion acquisition of PeopleSoft
11. Linda Cook
Executive Director, Gas & Power, Royal Dutch Shell
Has helped seal a handful of megadeals
12. Valerie Hermann
Chief Executive, Yves Saint Laurent
Run women's ready-to-wear at the Christian Dior brand, and was the business brain behind the John Galliano label
13. Yoshie Motohiro
Managing Director, Nissan Motor India
First woman at Nissan to run an overseas subsidiary
14. Christine Poon
Vice Chairman, Johnson & Johnson
Has managed the drug and biotechnology operations that are the company's largest source of sales and profits.
15. Renetta McCann
Chief Executive, Starcom MediaVest Group
Landed General Motors's $3.2 billion media-buying account
16. Anne Sweeney
President, Disney-ABC Television Group
Responsible for ABC, the Touchstone TV studio, Disney Channel, Toon Disney, SoapNet and ABCF amily, among other units
17. Ann Livermore
Executive Vice President, Hewlett-Packard
Executive vice president in charge of H-P's technology-solutions group, the largest division by revenue
18. Nancy Peretsman
Managing Director, Allen & Co.
Helped guide the $17.5 billion sale of Adelphia Communications Corp. to Time Warner Corp. and Comcast Corp.
19. Joyce Chang
Managing Director, J.P. Morgan Chase
Responsible for guiding investor strategy in three of the hottest areas in financial markets
20. Marluce Dias da Silva
Adviser, TV Globo
Introduced management methods that have saved the Brazilian company millions of dollars
21. Tami Booth Corwin
President, Rodale Books
Leads one of the most striking makeovers in book publishing
The Inheritors
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Shari Redstone
President, National Amusements
Building her own mini-empire through National Amusements Inc., the closely held movie-theater company that she runs
2. Abigail P. Johnson
President, Fidelity Employer Services
Retains an enormous presence in the industry that oversees America's retirement money
3. Ana Patricia Botn
Chairwoman, Banco Espaol de Credito
Has strengthened her position to succeed her father as the head of Banco Santander Central Hispano, one of the world's top 10 banks
4. Penny Pritzker
Chairman, TransUnion
Oversees the nonhotel side of the real-estate holdings and is chairman of Pritzker-owned TransUnion LLC, a big consumer-credit information firm
5. Mara Asuncin Arambruzabla de Garza
Vice Chairwoman, Grupo Modelo
Mexico's richest woman and heir to the Corona beer fortune
The Policy Makers
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Angela Merkel
German Chancellor-designate
Is expected to be confirmed next month as the first female leader of Germany
2. Wu Xiaoling
Deputy Governor, People's Bank of China
The most powerful woman in Chinese finance
3. Linda Chatman Thomsen
Director of Enforcement, Securities and Exchange Commission
Presided over some of the SEC's most high-profile cases, including its investigation of Enron
4. Janet Yellen
President, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Though on the FOMC for just over a year, Ms. Yellen is one of its most influential members
The Owners
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Oprah Winfrey
Harpo Inc.
Called "the Oprah effect," whenever Oprah Winfrey puts her promotional muscle behind something, impressive things happen
2. Miuccia Prada
Prada Group
The designer most worth watching on Italian catwalks
3. Elisabeth Murdoch
Shine
Launched her own television-production company in 2000
The Advocates
NAME
POSITION
ACHIEVEMENT
1. Sylvia Mathews
Chief Operating Officer, Gates Foundation
Last year, the foundation approved $1.465 billion in grants
2. Kazuyo Katsuma
Telecom analyst, J.P. Morgan Chase-Japan
Has gained legions of fans among Japanese working mothers
On the Sidelines
1. Carly Fiorina
Former CEO at Hewlett-Packard
Is well known to have an interest in Republican politics
2. Myrtle Potter
Former commercial operations president at Genentech.
Consults for several venture funds that invest in the biotech and drug industries and serves as a board member of Amazon.com
Edited by cahaya
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Posted: 15-Nov-2005 at 11:02
do u think as a malaysian, that rafida as Minister of Industries should be on the list?
After all Ho Ching is on the list.
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Posted: 15-Nov-2005 at 19:22
lol... rafidah aziz...
her roles and ur first lady roles is different... u know better in this... rafida cant declare herself as businesswoman yet unless she resign from her post as Minister of International Trade... her obligation as government servant.. (plus with AP issue.. )
if Datuk Zeti Ungku Aziz... she's better candidate i think.. as Malaysia's first Bank Negara Gevenor who is a lady..
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Posted: 16-Nov-2005 at 07:30
But then the list did list Merkel, so I assume women who have roles that affect industries and corporations would be in it.
Ho Ching is there only because the list needed to have a diversified POV.
They probably realized that they had too little representation from SEA, and so included a token.
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Posted: 16-Nov-2005 at 13:09
It would be rather complicated when u are a government servant and u are also running a business or involve in corporate... the public will have doubt on that... and questioning where does the fund for the business capital is coming from... this will lead to dispute and scandal... probably work on other country but not in Malaysia i guess...
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