More Resources
Home > Business Journals > Chief Executive (U.S.)

Chief Executive (U.S.)

Browse past and current articles from this publication.
Most recent articles from Chief Executive (U.S.)
It's about customers.(FEEDBACK)
I could not agree more with Bob Donnelly's column on CRM (CE Online, October/November 2007). I have been fortunate enough to have had three wonderful firsthand experiences with customers laying out . . .

Would a CEO make a good president?(FEEDBACK)
In an online column Chief Executive asked why CEOs are largely underrepresented from the ranks of political leaders, particularly those seeking the presidency (Mitt Romney notwithstanding). I . . .

Innovation as contact sport.(Editorial)
In a study conducted by McKinsey on Leadership and Innovation (www.mckinseyquarterly.com), researchers found a sizeable gap between the aspirations of business leaders to innovate and their ability . . .

What governors should know.(Editorial)(Brief article)
What do states like Texas, Nevada and North Carolina, which lead Chief Executive's (see p.18) annual survey of best states in which to do business, know that California, New York, Michigan . . .

Real change for a change.(Editorial)
CHANGE. IT'S THE NEW MANTRA. It's why caucusers in Iowa rocketed Barack Obama and Mike Huckabee into international stardom. Everyone wants it. Every candidate now claims he or she is an agent . . .

Lionizing lackeys: where you follow, I must lead.(FLIP SIDE)(Book review)
Every once in a while, somebody comes along with a theory so brilliant, so iconoclastic and yet so blitheringly obvious that the rest of us sit around grumbling, "Why didn't I think of that?" Such . . .

Scrapping Sarbox: voluntary measures offer efficient and effective protection without hobbling management.(REGULATION)
Modern CEOs always worry about the state regulation of their corporations. Unfortunately, these regulatory schemes have become more intrusive and less useful in recent years, because our . . .

Leading your business to maximum results: three questions every executive needs to answer first--and the tools for getting the a
Executives are finding it harder to meet investors' rising expectations. Owners are serious about wanting their companies to produce maximum results. This series of articles is about how to . . .

It's not easy being green: it's tough to separate the hype from reality when it comes to environmentally friendly initiatives. B
Chief executives who lived through the heady days of TQM and similar runaway management fads might be feeling just a little skeptical as they watch the green movement take on a life of its own. . . .

Delivering energy security: why is America still so dependent on oil?(UNCOMMON WISDOM)(Viewpoint essay)
I feel stupid, and I am angry. The stupidity is collective; the anger is personal. I am angry because I feel stupid and the reason is oil. Energy, actually, and that's the point. There is no . . .

Texas ranks number one.(Texas listed as the top state to do business)(Survey)
WHILE MUCH OF THE NATION'S FOCUS is jumping from state to state during the presidential primary race, CEOs did their own "state-jumping," ranking the best and worst states to do business. CEOs . . .

INfact.(CEO CHRONICLES)
Information begins with facts, which can be assembled to identify trends. Put it all together to derive knowledge. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 1. Impact on market valuations contributed by CEOs who . . .

Converting vision into action.(FEEDBACK)(Brief article)
I couldn't agree more with Bob Donnelly's "Converting CEO Vision Into Action" (The Entrepreneurial CEO). Too many CEOs focus on the surface of corporate management, which includes an abnormal focus . . .

CEO severance.(FEEDBACK)(Brief article)
Severance compensation has moved too far away from its original intent--first, to cover the vested "value" an executive gives up in order to take a new job, and second, to provide protection . . .

Time is the enemy.(EDITOR'S NOTE)(chief executive officer's tenure drops)
Contary to the old Rolling Stones lyric, time is not on your side. It's no secret that a CEO's tenure has been dropping precipitously over the last 10 years. In the 1990s, a chief could expect to . . .

The board bungled it.(EDITORIAL)
FOR ONE PRE-EMINENT FINANCIAL organization to lose its CEO is a misfortune, but for two prominent companies to lose their CEOs begins to look like carelessness. When Citigroup's Charles O. Prince . . .

Are we having fun yet? Fox's new strategy focuses on froth.(FLIP SIDE)
The day the Fox Business Channel debuted, the normally abrasive talk show host Bill O'Reilly advised anchors Neil Cavuto and Alexis Smith to "have fun with it." Since then, the news team has taken . . .

Best companies for leaders: in CE's third annual ranking, GE again eclipses P & G for top honors ... but only just.(LEADERSHIP)
Peter Drucker was quoted as saying that "the army trains and develops more leaders than do all other institutions together--and with a lower casualty rate." Not to be outdone, some corporations . . .

A prescription for health care: what can be done to improve the cost and quality of medical care.(ROUNDTABLE)(Company overview)
The numbers are shocking. The U.S. spends $2 trillion a year on its health system--50 percent more per capita than any other nation. Yet, as many as 90,000 Americans die each year from preventable . . .

Measuring the black box: how to design and implement innovation metrics.(INNOVATION)
More than two decades ago, management guru Tom Peters penned an editorial titled "What Gets Measured Gets Done." Indeed, one of the findings from the research that Peters summarized in the . . .

5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12  13  14  15  


Browse by Journal Name:
Today on Entrepreneur
Related Video

e-Business & Technology
Franchise News
Business Book Sampler
Starting a Business
Sales & Marketing
Growing a Business
E-mail*:
Zip Code*: