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Q & A | 06/24/2008 6:00 am

Who’s the Top Female CEO in America?

By The Staff at wowOwow.com
Chairmand and CEO of PepsiCo, USA, Indra Nooyi © AP

Editor’s Note: In an interview with wowOwow, New York Times business columnist Joe Nocera, whose latest book, Good Guys and Bad Guys, is a collection of his writings, also explains why wealthy women don’t buy yachts, how Wall Street still keeps a good woman down and why women’s sports is such a financial flop.

wOw: Who is the most effective female CEO to your mind?

Nocera: Without a doubt, it’s Indra Nooyi of Pepsi. She is tough and smart, but she is also quite charismatic, and a born leader. People respond to her, which I think is a key skill for any chief executive. And she is trying to do something really hard but really important — turn Pepsi into a company less dependent on its core soda business, and transition it to a company that makes food and drinks that are healthier.

wOw: Is there something different about her in comparison to an effective male CEO?

Good executives lead by example, by persuasion, by being able to explain why they are taking the course they are taking.

Nocera: To be honest, I don’t really think there is much difference between her and a good male chief executive. No CEO can simply say "jump" and expect the corporation to ask, "How high?" The world doesn’t work that way anymore. Good executives lead by example, by persuasion, by being able to explain why they are taking the course they are taking. People need to see that they are comfortable in their own skin, that they are not defensive, that they are empathetic — but that in the end, they can make the tough decisions. Jeff Immelt, in my opinion, has those qualities – and so does Indra Nooyi.

wOw: Other than our fabulous Mary Wells Lawrence, who is/was the best female entrepreneur in America?

Nocera: I have two candidates: Anita Roddick of the Body Shop, which, in addition to being a successful business, was an early leader in creating corporate culture that was "green" and progressive. My second candidate is Oprah Winfrey, who has done an amazing job "extending her brand" from one talk show into everything from XM Radio to magazines to the movies.

wOw: Are women changing Wall Street, or is Wall Street changing women?

Nocera: Neither. Wall Street is still a very male-oriented place, and women can have a hard time there. Most trading floors still have very few women, for instance, and there aren’t many women investment bankers either. The women who get to the executive suite on Wall Street are notable because there are so few of them. And two of them — Zoe Cruz at Morgan Stanley and Erin Callan at Lehman – recently lost their positions in no small part because their bosses were trying to save their own skins.

wOw: Many women have worked on Wall Street for many years. Is the Street any different?

Nocera: Not really. The women who have succeeded on Wall Street have had the kind of jobs that are autonomous but also don’t offer a great deal in terms of "climbing the greasy pole." For instance, Mary Meeker is a very well-known analyst, and Abbie Cohen at Goldman Sachs was
perhaps the best-known strategist during the Internet-bubble years. They could say what they wanted about companies and the economy (well, within certain limits), and run their shops as they saw fit. But neither was going to ever be in a serious leadership role. One woman
who does have such a role is Sally Krawcheck at Citigroup — but she too has hit the glass ceiling, having been removed as CFO as Chuck Prince
was trying (unsuccessfully) to save his job.

35 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Brooklyn Gal
Frannie, I think that light is from the train coming into the station, picking up this passenger, and heading to the outer reaches of the internet. Bye-bye!
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/24/2008 7:52 pm
Frannie Em
Carol, What are you saying. That you are taking some time off, or just tired of the forum?
By Frannie Em on 06/24/2008 8:08 pm
Brooklyn Gal
No Frannie :) That light you asked about is for the Doc. Joni is trying to find ways to get him on Mugsy’s train and off he will go.
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/24/2008 8:16 pm
E .
Wonderful news. Thank you Joni and all! Hurray for all of us.
By E . on 06/25/2008 11:49 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Dr. K: If you insist on posting on this site would you please write clearly and in complete sentences? I simply am at a loss as to why you write so incoherently.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 06/24/2008 9:53 am
Brooklyn Gal
My policy is I won’t own companies where women hold key top positions.” One doesn’t have to be Peggy Rometo to know what your comment will be even before we read it. Of course, if you were to write something with some serious thought to it, you might surprise us all! Mugsy, When is the train finally going to pull out of the station?
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/24/2008 11:43 am
Shooz
Oh, Dr. Klein - You’re putting us on! You wanna see a lot of ladies get excited!
By Shooz on 06/24/2008 4:22 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Shooz, Nay, he doesn’t get me excited at all. That would be George Clooney. I get a kick knowing what he is going to post even before I read it. Personally, I think he is looking for love. Why else would he keep posting on his finances? He just needs encouragement to go on “I-Date”. I leave it to your imagination to guess what the “I” stands for.
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/24/2008 5:19 pm
Frank Peterson
Mark, Mark, Mark I asked you once before to get your head outta your ass and you still haven’t done it—why is that? you’re a Doc you should be able to do that really quickly—you need to stop haranguing these ladies—it’s not nice—didn’t your mother teach you manners? Honestly Mark—you amaze me! Just s top it and play nice or else we’ll have to send you home>
By Frank Peterson on 06/24/2008 8:07 pm
Diana T
This is a tough question because there are several women CEOs that have turned their companies around and been very effective. I can think of Patricia Woertz, CEO of Archer Daniels Midland who is taking the company into renewable fuels. Then, there is Anne Mucahy, CEO of Xerox, Patricia Russo of Lucent and Christina Gold of Western Union. These women are inspiration to us all.
By Diana T on 06/24/2008 9:37 am
Dr. Mark Klein
The performance of above mentioned companies are nothing to write home to mama about. Archer Daniels Midland’s shares dropped 1/3 in recent months despite soaring food prices! Lucent got bought out for song in an all stock transaction with a French communications company. Xerox shares went from $60 in 2000 to about $10 today. Western Union’s shares made some money in a business almost entirely dependent on ilegal aliens stealing American jobs, undercutting American wages and consuming precious taxpayer supported public services. Also Pepsi’s tanked recently the result of a product mix under tremendous cost pressures of raw materials, transportation, and increasingly public awareness of just how unhealthy the company’s products are.
By Dr. Mark Klein on 06/24/2008 1:06 pm
Bonnie Oliver
My comment will relate to professional women’s sports. I think the failure of professional women’s’ sports in due primarily to the fact that there are not a sufficient quantity of women who are interested in team sports nor ‘contact sports’. That is not to say that all women are opposed to the rougher sports but not enough to sustain a professional league. Most of us hated field hockey in school and some even disliked volley ball. Many girls just suffered through the playing of team sports and just wanted to get to the library or chem lab or anyplace else. There is not that affinity that boys and then men share with the professional athlete. Most men know the rules of the sport and the abilities of the professional are often looked at in wonder. Most women do not share that same affinity to professional women athletes nor to the sports that they play. Personally, I would much rather watch a tennis match…..Wimbledon matches being played now. Lindsey Davenport made it through - injured and leg taped in three placed. And men will watch women in team sport - only on occasion.
By Bonnie Oliver on 06/24/2008 2:07 pm
Dr. Mark Klein
Bonnie, men’s tepid interest in women’s team sports is the result of most female athletes lack of the neuromuscular gifts which creates the magic people love to watch.
By Dr. Mark Klein on 06/24/2008 2:42 pm
Bonnie Oliver
But not on the tennis court, doctor.
By Bonnie Oliver on 06/24/2008 3:44 pm
Frank Peterson
Marky boyo, you obviously haven’t seen Seattle Storm—they pack them in—now play nice or mommy will paddle you widdle bottom.
By Frank Peterson on 06/24/2008 8:12 pm