By the time of the '90s boom, CEOs had become superheroes, accorded celebrity treatment and followed with a kind of slavish scrutiny that Alfred P. Sloan could never have imagined.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Steve Jobs was rare: a C.E.O. who actually had a huge impact on his company's fortunes. Contrary to corporate mythology, most C.E.O.s could be easily replaced, if not by your average Joe, then by your average executive vice-president. But Jobs genuinely earned the label of superstar.
You know, technology CEOs like to think of themselves as rock 'n roll stars.
I've been a comedian since I was fourteen. But I've never really been a CEO.
I hadn't grown up always aspiring to be a CEO.
Everything ultimately becomes the CEO's problem, no matter where it starts. I can see why some CEOs crack under the pressure.
Businessmen... were not born chief executives. They were often people first.
Great CEOs are not just born with shiny hair and a tie.
A lot of people thought Steve Jobs was a CEO of Apple but he never was until he came back to Apple in 1997.
CEOs can stay too long.
I think they, Peter McCullough was, turns out was not a good CEO.