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CNNMoney: Pay cuts coming for new Fannie, Freddie CEOsupdated: Tue Jan 17 2012 17:50:00

The next CEOs at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are unlikely to receive the controversial, multi-million dollar pay packages given to their predecessors, the companies' regulator said Tuesday.

CNNMoney: Why Fannie, Freddie execs get paid a lotupdated: Tue Nov 15 2011 13:42:00

Executives at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac need big pay packages to protect taxpayers from losing more of the billions spent to rescue the mortgage finance companies, according to the head of the agency that sets pay at the beleaguered firms.

Slashing jobs pays off ... if you're sitting in the executive suite.updated: Wed Sep 01 2010 07:59:00

A new report may add salt to the wounds of America's jobless. It seems many of their former bosses are profiting at their losses.

CNNMoney: BP's missed opportunity on executive payupdated: Thu Jul 29 2010 12:09:00

BP has pledged to learn from the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and to come away from the disaster with a renewed focus on safety.

CNNMoney: Obama to banks: 'Rebuild our economy'updated: Wed Dec 16 2009 12:17:00

President Obama pressed Wall Street bankers at the White House on Monday, urging them to make more loans and modify mortgages to help taxpayers who propped their banks up with federal bailouts.

CNNMoney: Washington's bank pay crackdownupdated: Thu Oct 22 2009 22:32:00

Washington launched its biggest offensive yet against Wall Street pay practices Thursday, taking aim at everyone from senior executives to high-flying traders of complex securities.

CNNMoney: Getting serious on CEO payupdated: Mon Sep 21 2009 15:33:00

A handful of major corporations have agreed to change the way they pay their employees, as calls to reform executive compensation structures heat up.

CNNMoney: Is health care the next 'bonusgate'?updated: Wed Sep 02 2009 11:50:00

Earlier this year, public outrage boiled over with news of eye-popping pay to top executives on Wall Street.

CNNMoney: 'Say on pay' moves full speed aheadupdated: Tue Jul 28 2009 14:13:00

It may not be long before shareholders have more control over how much money top executives across the country make.

CNNMoney: AIG bonuses: $235 million to goupdated: Fri Jul 10 2009 14:07:00

Bailed-out insurer AIG again found itself in the crosshairs of bonus rage on Friday over its plans to pay $2.4 million in executive bonuses next week.

CNNMoney: White House proposes new pay legislationupdated: Wed Jun 10 2009 18:05:00

The Obama administration moved forward Wednesday on curbing runaway corporate pay practices, proposing new legislation aimed at giving shareholders a greater voice on executive pay and appointing a new so-called "pay czar."

Fortune: In defense of middle managersupdated: Mon Mar 09 2009 14:34:00

It's a scary time for all workers, but what about middle management, the often-overlooked center of a business? Are they an unnecessary layer between line workers and senior management? One scholar says no. Paul Osterman, professor of human resources and management at M.I.T.'s Sloan School of Management, recently published The Truth About Middle Managers (Harvard Business Press), arguing why this in-between group of workers is actually integral to an organization. In an interview with Fortune, Osterman talked about the plight of middle managers in a down economy.

Stimulus amendment puts tough limits on executive payupdated: Sat Feb 14 2009 18:24:00

An amendment in the $787 billion economic stimulus package passed by Congress Friday would severely restrict bonuses and other forms of compensation for top executives at companies receiving federal bailout money.

Commentary: Government shouldn't decide executive payupdated: Thu Feb 05 2009 16:01:00

Americans are outraged over excessive CEO pay and perks. That outrage is justified, particularly when American taxpayers are footing the bill.

Limiting CEO payupdated: Thu Feb 05 2009 16:01:00

Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Firona discusses Pres. Obama's call for a pay cap of bailout bank CEO's.

CNNMoney: CEO pay cuts: Not just for banksupdated: Thu Feb 05 2009 12:35:00

Pay cuts could be coming to a corner office near you, even if you're not the CEO of a troubled bank.

Fortune: Obama talks tough on CEO payupdated: Wed Feb 04 2009 14:26:00

President Obama is having his say on soaring executive pay.

CNNMoney: Merrill CEO drops $10M bonus bidupdated: Tue Dec 09 2008 19:34:00

Merrill Lynch's chief executive John Thain has reportedly dropped his request for a $10 million annual bonus after being blasted by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo.

CNNMoney: CEO compensation up 7.5% in 2007updated: Tue Dec 09 2008 17:12:00

Overall compensation for the nation's top executives rose more than expected last year, but the rate of increase was the lowest in six years, according to a study released Tuesday.

Fortune: Investors join Obama on CEO payupdated: Fri Nov 14 2008 10:50:00

President-elect Barack Obama had plenty to say about corporate excess on the campaign trail. One place his presidency should have a direct and early impact is on so-called "say on pay" legislation that would make annual shareholder votes on senior executive compensation part of securities law.

Fortune: Exec comp rules won't pay off bigupdated: Wed Oct 15 2008 14:03:00

Congressman and Wall Street critic Barney Frank calls the new rules governing executive pay for banks that take direct government investment "historic," adding "[t]his is the first time in American history that the federal government has applied restrictions on the compensation that goes to top executives."

Commentary: Blame boards of directors for financial messupdated: Thu Sep 18 2008 13:41:00

As big Wall Street firms topple like dominoes, there is plenty of blame to go around.

CNNMoney: Investor push on CEO pay sputteringupdated: Wed Apr 30 2008 13:21:00

Shareholders have been up arms lately about huge CEO paychecks, but so far that fervor hasn't translated into much action.

FSB: A tiny telecom startup calls for helpupdated: Thu Apr 17 2008 14:47:00

As the boss of a construction company that laid cable from Atlanta to Los Angeles, Kirkland Dudley had achieved a dream that remained elusive to many African Americans. He was rich. Respected. A leader in the black community.

CNNMoney: 3 CEOs made $460 million - House panelupdated: Thu Mar 06 2008 16:30:00

Three chief executives with ties to the mortgage crisis were paid $460 million over five years, according to a congressional report issued Thursday.

CNNMoney: SEC site reveals executive payupdated: Fri Dec 21 2007 15:50:00

The Securities and Exchange Commission launched an Internet tool Friday that makes it easier for investors to research and compare executive compensation.

CNNMoney: Your bonus is safe, your boss' isn'tupdated: Thu Dec 20 2007 15:37:00

John Mack isn't getting one this year. Neither is James Cayne.

Fortune: Carly Fiorina talks toughupdated: Wed Oct 24 2007 09:12:00

Carly Fiorina didn't just break the glass ceiling, she obliterated it, as the first woman to lead a FORTUNE 20 company. But her fall from stardom was just as dramatic, and she remains a controversial figure, with opinion split on whether she deserves credit for HP's success since her firing in 2005. Fortune's Matthew Boyle talked to Fiorina - who now serves on several advisory boards, including the CIA's - about CEO pay, Dell's woes, and what she's learned from her tumultuous time at the top and, more recently, on the sidelines.

CNNMoney: Lack of female CEOs: Not just problem for womenupdated: Mon Jul 16 2007 22:19:00

The higher women climb in Corporate America, the more difficult the ascent.

Fortune: Who business is betting onupdated: Tue Jun 26 2007 06:28:00

One of Hillary Clinton's most important courtships began early last year, around a formal dinner table at Georgetown's Four Seasons Hotel. Her targets were Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack and his wife, Christy. Mack was already active politically - but on behalf of Clinton's political opponents. A Bush "Ranger," he had raised at least $200,000 for the President's reelection bid and was one of the most prominent business names on GOP donor lists. At one time his name had circulated as a potential Bush Treasury Secretary.

CNNMoney: House passes 'say on pay' billupdated: Fri Apr 20 2007 16:39:00

The House passed legislation that gives shareholders a nonbinding say on executive compensation on Friday.

CNNMoney: CEO pay flap reaches Houseupdated: Thu Mar 08 2007 09:55:00

The issue of whether or not shareholders should get a say on company CEO compensation drew experts on both sides to a House hearing Thursday.

CNNMoney: Aflac lets shareholders weigh in on exec payupdated: Wed Feb 14 2007 06:37:00

Aflac said Wednesday its board approved a resolution giving shareholders the right to a non-binding vote on executive pay packages that will take effect in 2009.

CNNMoney: Bush: Mind CEO pay, change how Sarbanes-Oxley worksupdated: Wed Jan 31 2007 09:42:00

On the heels of stronger-than-expected economic growth numbers and ahead of the Federal Reserve announcement on interest rates, President Bush on Wednesday told a Wall Street audience that a strong economy worthy of investors' confidence requires free trade, business regulation that's fair but not oppressive, and better transparency in terms of executive pay.

FSB: A tiny telecom startup calls for helpupdated: Wed Dec 20 2006 10:56:00

As the boss of a construction company that laid cable from Atlanta to Los Angeles, Kirkland Dudley had achieved a dream that remained elusive to many African Americans. He was rich. Respected. A le...

CNNMoney: Construction CEOs get fattest pay raiseupdated: Tue Nov 21 2006 10:09:00

CEOs in the construction industry enjoyed the biggest percentage pay increase in 2005 relative to peers in other major industries, according to a new report.

Fortune: Are today's CEOs batting a thousand?updated: Fri Oct 20 2006 10:01:00

Just what makes a CEO great? Is it the ability to inspire the troops with bold visions of future growth? (You know, like Jeff Bezos at Amazon back in the day.) Or is it the resolve to cut ruthlessl...

Fortune: The real CEO pay problemupdated: Wed Jun 28 2006 16:12:00

The setting: a private gathering that included several leading lights on Wall Street and the heads of some of America's biggest companies.

Business 2.0: How to end CEO pay envyupdated: Thu Jun 01 2006 16:11:00

By now, you've probably read some of the infuriating stats: According to a study by the Federal Reserve, American chief executive salaries have ballooned to more than 170 times the average worker's...

CNNMoney: Study: Mutual funds aid excess CEO payupdated: Tue Mar 28 2006 06:36:00

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - A study analyzing proxy votes on executive compensation issues alleges that mutual fund firms have enabled excess CEO pay.

CNNMoney: CEO pay growth slowsupdated: Mon Mar 20 2006 15:34:00

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - There are no paupers among CEOs of companies listed on the S&P indexes. But there has been a slowing in the growth of their pay, according to the latest research from The Corporate Library, a corporate governance watchdog.

CNNMoney: Report: Boards to reel in CEO payupdated: Tue Feb 21 2006 07:48:00

More corporate boards are tying executive pay to company performance, according to a report published Tuesday.

Fortune: Star Powerupdated: Mon Jan 30 2006 11:18:00

DAVID CALHOUN General Electric LEADING HEADHUNTERS AGREE: The No. 1 draft pick in the game of grabbing top executive talent--the most lusted-after managerial star who isn't already a CEO--is David Calhoun of General Electric. "He's the top of the list," says Gerry Roche of executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles. "He's the complete package," says Roche's archrival, Tom Neff of SpencerStuart. In this game, if Roche and Neff say you're it, you're it.

Fortune: Rising Star: David Calhoun, General Electricupdated: Tue Jan 24 2006 13:56:00

Leading headhunters agree: The No. 1 draft pick in the game of grabbing top executive talent -- the most lusted-after managerial star who isn't already a CEO -- is David Calhoun of General Electric.

Fortune: Solving a $122 billion problemupdated: Tue Jan 17 2006 14:15:00

The Securities and Exchange Commission and Christopher Cox, its straight-talking chairman, have begun taking steps that could curb excessive CEO pay. But they have only just begun.

Fortune: Targeting CEO Compupdated: Mon Dec 12 2005 00:01:00

DID YOU GET A 30% RAISE LAST YEAR? IF NOT, YOU MAY be among the millions of Americans who are understandably furious that the average CEO did get that big a pay hike, according to a new survey by t...

CNNMoney: CEO pay: Sky high gets even higherupdated: Fri Aug 26 2005 11:38:00

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - If sky-high executive pay at publicly traded companies gives you vertigo, you might want to read this sitting down.

CNNMoney: AIG reveals secretive executive payupdated: Tue Jun 28 2005 07:03:00

The American International Group, the insurance giant engulfed in an accounting scandal, released details of an unusual compensation plan that gave ousted chief executive Maurice Greenberg and other top executives millions of dollars in previously undisclosed stock awards, according to a report Tuesday.

Fortune: CEO pay meets its match: plaintiffs lawyersupdated: Mon Aug 09 2004 00:01:00

I'm sick and tired of the eternal handwringing over CEO pay. Yes, it's out of control; we all know it, and that's as far as we ever get. A year ago the conventional view held that CEO pay was next ...

Fortune: 50 Best Companies for Minorities In an ideal world the leading companies for minority employees would be tops updated: Mon Jun 28 2004 00:01:00

I'm not the typical minority," says Jose de Lasa in a thick Caribbean accent. De Lasa thinks that because he was born and raised in a privileged family in Cuba that came to Miami when he was 20 yea...

Fortune: When Will They Stop? Despite last year's loud cries for pay reform, FORTUNE 500 CEOs made more money than ever updated: Mon May 03 2004 00:01:00

On Jan. 13, employees of Agere Systems, the $1.9 billion semiconductor maker that spun off from Lucent in 2002, arrived at work to find a letter from CEO John Dickson in their in-boxes. A typical e...

Fortune: Have They No Shame? Their performance stank last year, yet most CEOs got paid more than ever. Here's how updated: Mon Apr 28 2003 00:01:00

But the pigs were so clever that they could think of a way round every difficulty. --George Orwell, Animal Farm

Fortune: Mo' Money, Fewer Problems Is it a good idea to get rid of the $1 million CEO pay ceiling?updated: Mon Mar 31 2003 00:01:00

The latest plan to rein in executive compensation is simple: Make it easier for companies to pay top honchos more than $1 million a year.

Fortune: From Heroes to Goats... And To And Back Again? How corporate leaders lost our trust.updated: Mon Nov 18 2002 00:01:00

The food was good. The weather was heavenly. But the Greenbrier resort in West Virginia was not an especially joyous place in early October as 68 chief executives converged for a meeting of the sup...

Business 2.0: Forgiven It isn't just the Enrons and the Tycos of the world that will eat huge losses on insider loans. It turns out that theupdated: Fri Nov 01 2002 00:01:00

Early in September, Microsoft had a small confession to make. Back in December 2000, the company had lent its president, Rick Belluzzo, $15 million, taking some of his stock options as collateral. ...

Fortune: America's 50 Best Companies for Minorities In our fifth year of examining the work forces of large firms, we updated: Mon Jul 08 2002 00:01:00

The firms on FORTUNE's fifth annual Best Companies for Minorities list aren't immune to the problems currently plaguing corporate America. No. 12, Lucent, has sacked half its workers. No. 14, Xerox...

Fortune: 'This Stuff Is Wrong' That's the conclusion of most of the insiders who talked to FORTUNE--candidly--about CEO pay. And you knowupdated: Mon Jun 25 2001 00:01:00

In the great, continuing, and probably everlasting debate about executive compensation, the world knows pretty well what two sides of the pay triangle think. Most CEOs seem to believe they're worth...

Fortune: The Great CEO Pay Heist Executive compensation has become highway robbery--we all know that. But how did it updated: Mon Jun 25 2001 00:01:00

Sandy Weill, who got a pay package worth some $151 million for running Citigroup last year, was a Brooklyn teenager back in the summer of 1950, preparing to return to Peekskill Military Academy. Ja...

FSB: How You Can Hire Gray Hairs TIPS FOR THE BUSINESS OWNER IN SEARCH OF THE SEASONED EXECupdated: Fri Dec 01 2000 00:01:00

Impromptu Gourmet couldn't wait any longer. It had assembled just about all the ingredients it needed: a strategy, $4 million from Scripps Ventures and other backers, and the product itself, haute ...

Fortune: Europe's New Business Elite Wake up, America. Today's European CEO is a global animal who lives to do deals and make shareholderupdated: Mon Apr 03 2000 00:01:00

Goran Lindahl is absolutely neurotic about his company's stock. On a late January day, the chief executive of ABB, the Swiss-Swedish engineering group, is being interviewed by FORTUNE at the compan...

Fortune: It's a Banner Year for CEO Pay FUN WITH PROXY STATEMENTSupdated: Mon Apr 26 1999 00:01:00

Much of the fun of proxy season--you do find it fun?--is getting a peek at the private finances of public figures who make a whole lot of money. Even if you don't read proxy statements recreational...

Fortune: Proxies: The Treasure Is Still Buried You thought tougher SEC rules would make CEO compensation transparent? Rising to the challupdated: Mon Jun 08 1998 00:01:00

You probably recall that six years ago, the Securities and Exchange Commission issued new rules that oblige companies to spell out, in proxy statements to shareholders, what top executives earn. Us...

Fortune: THE NEXT BEST THING TO FREE MONEY SILICON VALLEY'S STOCK-OPTION CULTURE IS DOING A WHOLE LOT MORE THAN MAKING updated: Mon Jul 07 1997 00:01:00

Among the T-shirted techies who cram the dingy offices of NetGravity, a San Mateo, Calif., software startup, Stephen Recht stands out. He wears a tie. He is 45. He has a wife and a son and a house ...

Fortune: CEO PAY: MOM WOULDN'T APPROVE SHE'S A LONG-TERM INVESTOR WHO EXPECTS CEOS TO THINK LIKE OWNERS. BUT TODAY'S updated: Mon Mar 31 1997 00:01:00

Twice a year my mailbox is jammed with glossy publications. Early autumn brings the catalogues, which I carry upstairs and riffle through, looking at photographs of stuff I can barely afford. Now, ...

Fortune: SEEING THE FUTURE FIRST Could you and your team debate a trend for eight hours? Most managers spend far too little energy forginupdated: Mon Sep 05 1994 00:01:00

ARE YOU competing to dominate your industry's future? To find out, ask yourself three questions we often ask senior managers: First, what percentage of your time is spent on external rather than in...

Fortune: THE TROUBLE WITH TEAMS They're a major innovation in organizing work, and everybody loves them -- in theory. In practice it's anupdated: Mon Sep 05 1994 00:01:00

CORPORATE AMERICA is having a hot love affair with teams. And why not? When teams work, there's nothing like them for turbocharging productivity. Beguiling examples abound: Scores of service compan...

Fortune: BURNED-OUT BOSSES Managers are facing more painful tasks, like firing wave after wave of people. As a result, more bosses are loupdated: Mon Jul 25 1994 00:01:00

BECAUSE WE believe in you, we are raising your sales quota 20%. But your relationship with customers is already strong, so we're trimming your travel budget. Also, would you mind sharing your secre...

Fortune: THE NEW PAY GAME. . .AND HOW YOU MEASURE UP The manager's job has changed, and so have the rules used to determine who earns whaupdated: Mon Oct 19 1992 00:01:00

IF YOU ARE a manager or a professional working for someone else, chances are that money has been on your mind a lot lately, just after job security. The recession and modest inflation have induced ...

Fortune: WHAT CEOs REALLY MAKE It was a sneaky year: With profits down, salaries and bonuses held steady -- but oh, boy, those option graupdated: Mon Jun 15 1992 00:01:00

FROM THE DIN of the campaign trail to the cross fire at annual meetings, the issue of executive pay is stirring outrage and cries for reform. FORTUNE's survey of CEO pay at 200 of America's largest...

Fortune: HOW TO PAY THE CEO RIGHT As the furor widens, America's business chiefs and corporate boards can fix the system -- or let Washinupdated: Mon Apr 06 1992 00:01:00

CEOS ARE PAID a lot to face facts, however unpleasant, so it's time they faced this one: The issue of their pay has finally landed on the national agenda and won't be leaving soon. It is now inevit...

Fortune: STOCK OPTIONS ENDANGEREDupdated: Mon Feb 24 1992 00:01:00

Bad news for anyone who hopes to get employee stock options: Your chances just slipped a notch. It's nothing personal. The ever hotter issue of CEO pay has reignited a debate over what those option...

Fortune: HOW MUCH CEOs REALLY MAKE There's more to CEO pay than meets the eye -- a lot more, as our method of valuing long-term incentiveupdated: Mon Jun 17 1991 00:01:00

THIS COULD be the moment the great CEO pay bash starts winding down. Could be. We won't know until proxy statements come out next spring. But excesses of this past year produced an outcry that has ...

Fortune: THE GREAT CEO PAY SWEEPSTAKES Had a terrific year? You could earn a mint -- or a pittance. Top bosses often aren't paid accordinupdated: Mon Jun 18 1990 00:01:00

IF YOU THINK American CEOs are overpaid, you'll find this latest news depressing: They're making more than ever, and the connection between their pay and performance is weakening. These are among t...

Fortune: THE HUNT FOR THE GLOBAL MANAGER Good at languages and not overly bothered by jet lag? Your phone may ring soon. Headhunters are updated: Mon May 21 1990 00:01:00

JAN PRISING is a Swede who runs an American-owned company out of an office overlooking Lake Varese in Italy. He speaks five languages -- but not Italian -- and conducts most of his business in Engl...

Fortune: GET READY FOR THE NEW WORK FORCE If demographics are destiny, companies that aggressively hire, train, and promote women and minupdated: Mon Apr 23 1990 00:01:00

HAROLD EPPS, who runs the Digital Equipment Corp. plant that makes computer keyboards, manages the work force of the future. The Boston factory's 350 employees come from 44 countries and speak 19 l...

Fortune: THE PEOPLE WHO SET THE CEO'S PAY They're the compensation committee -- always conflicted, usually co-opted -- and this season ofupdated: Mon Mar 12 1990 00:01:00

IF THERE WAS ever a compensation package that proved you could win by losing, it's the one CenTrust Bank of Miami gave its chairman, David Paul. In fiscal 1989, while the thrift suffered close to $...

Fortune: THE TRUST GAP Corporate America is split by a gulf between top management and everybody else -- in pay, in perks, in self-importupdated: Mon Dec 04 1989 00:01:00

TODAY, as CEOs waken to the new dawn of participatory management and even slugabeds are heard to murmur ''empowerment'' in their sleep, there is reason to believe that their heretofore faithful ret...

Fortune: SEEKING THE SENSE IN CEO PAY Sometimes there's precious little. In an exclusive study, a noted compensation consultant shows whaupdated: Mon Jun 05 1989 00:01:00

WHAT'S going on with CEO pay? FORTUNE asked Graef S. Crystal to answer that question, repeating a ground-breaking study that he conducted last year and wrote about in this magazine (June 6, 1988). ...

Fortune: SO WHAT IS THE BEST WAY TO PAY? Chief executives differ over that question, the latest FORTUNE 500/CNN Moneyline CEO Poll shows.updated: Mon Jun 05 1989 00:01:00

AMERICA'S top chief executives are sharply divided over some of the most basic principles of how they are paid. Is their compensation sufficiently linked to performance? About half say yes, half no...

Fortune: HOW THE NEXT CEO WILL BE DIFFERENT Here's what today's top executives in 20 countries say tomorrow's ) leaders will be like. A hupdated: Mon May 22 1989 00:01:00

The bulk of major American corporations are failing in one of the most basic tasks -- developing tomorrow's CEOs. They can't afford simply to clone today's leaders. They need radically different on...

Fortune: MAKING OVER MIDDLE MANAGERS It's among the toughest and most important tasks facing companies trying to recast themselves as leaupdated: Mon May 08 1989 00:01:00

IT IS THE WORST OF TIMES for middle managers, that beleaguered band of demibosses currently blamed for most ills afflicting corporate America. Either their jobs are vanishing in mergers, takeovers,...

Fortune: TAKE THE MYSTERY OUT OF CEO PAY Too many dollars get concealed in proxy statements -- or aren't reported at all. Companies shoulupdated: Mon Apr 24 1989 00:01:00

IT'S PROXY SEASON, and a favorite activity of many shareholders in coming weeks will be checking how much their companies' top executives got paid. Lots of luck. The Securities and Exchange Commiss...

Fortune: AT LAST, SOFTWARE CEOs CAN USE Executives are finally getting fast, clear information about what's happening in the bowels of thupdated: Mon Mar 13 1989 00:01:00

EARLY ONE DAY last year, Duracell CEO C. Robert Kidder decided to spend his first hour at work browsing through a computer system designed for the company's top executives. This time he was curious...

Fortune: HOT COMPANY, WARM CULTURE The folks who run Herman Miller Inc., the fast-growing office furniture maker, credit much of their suupdated: Mon Feb 27 1989 00:01:00

WOULD THIS HAPPEN at your company? A young woman, a line worker in an assembly plant, shows up at the chairman's office in a sour mood. Not only does she get in to see the boss, but he sits there a...

Fortune: WHERE'S THE RISK IN CEOs' REWARDS? Often there isn't any, and that means trouble as more companies ask employees to put their paupdated: Mon Dec 19 1988 00:01:00

YOU CAN'T BLAME the troops for being suspicious. Top management wants to put us on some incentive pay plan? Us, out here in Division 12? They want to put more of our pay ''at risk,'' as they say, s...

Fortune: WHY ASIAN CHIEF EXECUTIVES GET SUCH SMALL SALARIESupdated: Mon Nov 07 1988 00:01:00

Like many Japanese companies, Toray Industries, the country's biggest maker of synthetic fibers, was hurt by the strengthening yen. The $6-billion-a-year company saw its domestic market eroded by A...

Fortune: AMERICAN BOSSES ARE OVERPAID . . . . . . Or their counterparts in Europe are underpaid. However you argue it, the gap is too hugupdated: Mon Nov 07 1988 00:01:00

FROM EUROPE to the Orient, top managers are strikingly underpaid compared with their U.S. counterparts. Chief executives of 24 U.S. companies, including Du Pont, Sara Lee, Toys ''R'' Us, and Lotus ...

Fortune: THE SEVEN KEYS TO BUSINESS LEADERSHIP A presidential campaign raises the question anew: How can corporate chiefs go beyond managupdated: Mon Oct 24 1988 00:01:00

THE BARBARIAN HORDES were descending on Rome, mayhem in their loathsome souls. There was only one man to take charge of the republic in its hour of need, and the call went out to a humble farmer na...

Fortune: WOMEN BEAT THE CORPORATE GAME They have learned to pattern their lives on those of careerist men and fix an unblinking eye on thupdated: Mon Sep 12 1988 00:01:00

READER, you have in your hands not only a magazine but also a mirror. If you are a woman who works in a corporation, you may encounter yourself here -- perhaps a middle manager, standing at the edg...

Fortune: COOL CURES FOR BURNOUT As companies shrink and workloads rise, even the best managers are losing their old pizazz. Try an eveninupdated: Mon Jun 20 1988 00:01:00

HOW DOES IT FEEL to burn out? The architect who was the hero of Graham Greene's haunting novel A Burnt-Out Case explained: ''At the end you haven't even got a self to express. I have no interest in...

Fortune: THE WACKY, WACKY WORLD OF CEO PAY An exclusive study shows that top-level compensation doesn't make much sense. If some boards oupdated: Mon Jun 06 1988 00:01:00

FIGURE THIS OUT: Last year was not a sterling one for Bally Manufacturing, the casino operator and maker of pinball machines. Among the diversified service companies on FORTUNE's Service 500, Bally...

Fortune: BOTCHING UP A GREAT BANK Under Tom Clausen, BankAmerica shoveled money out so fast it couldn't keep track. When the loans finallupdated: Mon Jun 06 1988 00:01:00

AMADEO PETER GIANNINI, the San Francisco fruit merchant who founded BankAmerica, believed that the best customer a bank could have was the ''little fellow.'' Not that Giannini had modest ambitions:...

Fortune: TOMORROW'S CHIEF EXECUTIVES Raised on radical change, a new group of leaders will soon take charge of corporate America. They'reupdated: Mon May 09 1988 00:01:00

IF YOU WANT to analyze a corporation, read its financial statements. If you want to plumb its soul, talk to its chief executive. Despite the size and complexity of modern corporations, the person i...

Fortune: WANTED: LEADERS WHO CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE Mere management isn't good enough anymore. Here's how companies are trying to turn outupdated: Mon Sep 28 1987 00:01:00

SAY FAREWELL to the classic postwar American manager, that model of rational decision-making who coolly piloted us through the prosperity of the Fifties and the go-go of the Sixties, only to begin ...

Fortune: SCULLEY'S LESSONS FROM INSIDE APPLE In this exclusive excerpt from his new book, Chief Executive John Sculley tells how he brokeupdated: Mon Sep 14 1987 00:01:00

At 43, John Sculley was among the hottest of hotshots at PepsiCo. President of the Pepsi-Cola division, he was a marketing wizard with a good chance of heading the parent company. Then in 1983 Appl...

Fortune: THE GREATEST CAPITALIST IN HISTORY Thomas J. Watson Jr. got his job from his father, but built IBM into a colossus big enough toupdated: Mon Aug 31 1987 00:01:00

If creating wealth for shareholders is the best measure of a businessman's success, Thomas J. Watson Jr. is the greatest capitalist who ever lived. When Watson, now 73, retired as IBM's chief execu...

Fortune: PERSONALITY TESTS ARE BACK The latest management tool dates to Carl Jung. It slices executives into 16 categories and purports tupdated: Mon Mar 30 1987 00:01:00

ESFJ SPOKEN HERE,'' reads the sign on the accountant's desk at Compass Computer Services in Dallas. Her boss, the controller, has a card that says he speaks ''ISTJ.'' The scrambled letters have als...

Fortune: MANAGERS WITHOUT A COMPANY For most who get the ax in corporate retrenchments, generous severance packages can't compensate for updated: Mon Oct 28 1985 00:01:00

THOMAS R. Wagener, 43, is unemployed. For 17 years he had climbed the executive ladder of Abex Corp., a subsidiary of IC Industries that manufactures castings and hydraulic equipment. ''Not too lon...

Fortune: COVER STORY EXECUTIVE PERKS UNDER FIRE Reagan's tax reform is the latest of many efforts to squeeze these special benefits, but updated: Mon Jul 22 1985 00:01:00

ANY AMERICAN executive worth his perks might be a bit worried nowadays about the continued availability of these special benefits. First, the Internal Revenue Service got tough on company cars -- h...

Fortune: COVER STORY THE EXECUTIVE ADDICT He may work in any industry or any city. He abuses cocaine, prescription drugs, even heroin. Heupdated: Mon Jun 24 1985 00:01:00

UNARMED and uncomfortable about it, Ed Loyd, chief of security for a West Coast company, parked in a deserted area near Stevens Creek Reservoir in Cupertino, California, and headed up a forest trai...

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