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chairman and chief executive

  • 1 chairman and chief executive

    chairman and chief executive (AE) PERS, MGT Chairman m and Chief Executive m, Vorsitzender m und geschäftsführender Direktor m, Vorsitzende f und geschäftsführende Direktorin f, Vorstandsvorsitzende m(f) (cf chairman and managing director BE)

    Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > chairman and chief executive

  • 2 chairman of the board and chief executive

    chairman of the board and chief executive (AE) PERS, MGT Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive m, Vorsitzender m des Verwaltungsrats und geschäftsführender Director (cf BE: chairman of the board and managing director)

    Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > chairman of the board and chief executive

  • 3 chairman and managing director

    chairman and managing director (BE) PERS, MGT Chairman m and Managing Director m, Vorsitzender m und geschäftsführender Direktor m, Vorsitzende f und geschäftsführende Direktorin f, Vorstandsvorsitzende m(f) (cf chairman and chief executive AE)

    Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > chairman and managing director

  • 4 Chief Executive Officer

    Chief Executive Officer (CEO) (AE) 1. Chief-Executive-Officer m, (jarg) CEO m, Vorsitzende m(f) des Exekutiv-Ausschusses, Geschäftsführer(in) m(f), geschäftsführender Direktor m, geschäftsführende Direktorin f, Vorsitzende m(f) der Geschäftsführung (innerhalb des Board of Directors; der CEO hat die operative Leitungs- und Kontrollfunktion in amerikanischen Unternehmen, er führt das Tagesgeschäft und berichtet an den Chairman of the Board, den Vorsitzenden des Verwaltungsrats im monistischen Leitungssystem, wenn die beiden Ämter nicht als ‚Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive’ in Personalunion geführt werden, womit eine schwer kontrollierbare Machtfülle verbunden sein kann; im UK entspricht der CEO dem Managing Director); Vorstandsvorsitzender m (im kontinentaleuropäischen zweistufigen Aufsichtsratssystem, Two-Tier Board, Two-Tier system); (infrml) Konzernchef m (in a group, in einer Unternehmensgruppe); 2. LAW Geschäftsführer(in) m(f); Hauptgeschäftsführer(in) m(f) (in a federation, in einem Verband)

    Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > Chief Executive Officer

  • 5 chairman of the board and managing director

    chairman of the board and managing director (BE) PERS, MGT Chairman of the Board and Managing Director m, Vorsitzender m des Verwaltungsrats und geschäftsführender Director (cf AE: chairman and chief executive)

    Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > chairman of the board and managing director

  • 6 Sarnoff, David

    [br]
    b. 27 February 1891 Uzlian, Minsk (now in Belarus)
    d. 12 December 1971 New York City, New York, USA
    [br]
    Russian/American engineer who made a major contribution to the commercial development of radio and television.
    [br]
    As a Jewish boy in Russia, Sarnoff spent several years preparing to be a Talmudic Scholar, but in 1900 the family emigrated to the USA and settled in Albany, New York. While at public school and at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, he helped the family finances by running errands, selling newspapers and singing the liturgy in the synagogue. After a short period as a messenger boy with the Commercial Cable Company, in 1906 he became an office boy with the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America (see G. Marconi). Having bought a telegraph instrument with his first earnings, he taught himself Morse code and was made a junior telegraph operator in 1907. The following year he became a wireless operator at Nantucket Island, then in 1909 he became Manager of the Marconi station at Sea Gate, New York. After two years at sea he returned to a shore job as wireless operator at the world's most powerful station at Wanamaker's store in Manhattan. There, on 14 April 1912, he picked up the distress signals from the sinking iner Titanic, remaining at his post for three days.
    Rewarded by rapid promotion (Chief Radio Inspector 1913, Contract Manager 1914, Assistant Traffic Manager 1915, Commercial Manager 1917) he proposed the introduction of commercial radio broadcasting, but this received little response. Consequently, in 1919 he took the job of Commercial Manager of the newly formed Radio Corporation of America (RCA), becoming General Manager in 1921, Vice- President in 1922, Executive Vice-President in 1929 and President in 1930. In 1921 he was responsible for the broadcasting of the Dempsey-Carpentier title-fight, as a result of which RCA sold $80 million worth of radio receivers in the following three years. In 1926 he formed the National Broadcasting Company (NBC). Rightly anticipating the development of television, in 1928 he inaugurated an experimental NBC television station and in 1939 demonstrated television at the New York World Fair. Because of his involvement with the provision of radio equipment for the armed services, he was made a lieutenant-colonel in the US Signal Corps Reserves in 1924, a full colonel in 1931 and, while serving as a communications consultant to General Eisenhower during the Second World War, Brigadier General in 1944.
    With the end of the war, RCA became a major manufacturer of television receivers and then invested greatly in the ultimately successful development of shadowmask tubes and receivers for colour television. Chairman and Chief Executive from 1934, Sarnoff held the former post until his retirement in 1970.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    French Croix de Chevalier d'honneur 1935, Croix d'Officier 1940, Croix de Commandant 1947. Luxembourg Order of the Oaken Crown 1960. Japanese Order of the Rising Sun 1960. US Legion of Merit 1946. UN Citation 1949. French Union of Inventors Gold Medal 1954.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Sarnoff, David

  • 7 Jobs, Steven Paul

    [br]
    b. 24 February 1955 San Francisco, California, USA
    [br]
    American engineer who, with Stephen Wozniak, built the first home computer.
    [br]
    Moving with his family to Mountain View, Palo Alto, in 1960, Jobs entered Homestead High School, Cupertino, in 1968. At about the same time he joined the Explorers' Club for young engineers set up by Hewlett-Packard Company. As a result of this contact, three years later he met up with Stephen Wozniak, who was working at Hewlett-Packard and helped him with the construction of the first home computer based on the 8-bit MOS Technology 6502 microprocessor. In 1973 he went to Reid College, Portland, Oregon, to study engineering, but he dropped out in the second semester and spent time in India. On his return he obtained a job with Atari to design video games, but he soon met up again with Wozniak, who had been unable to interest Hewlett-Packard in commercial development of his home computer. Together they therefore founded Apple Computer Company to make and market it, and found a willing buyer in the Byte Shop chain store. The venture proved successful, and with the help of a financial backer, Mike Markkula, a second version, the Apple II, was developed in 1976. With Jobs as Chairman, the company experienced a phenomenal growth and by 1983 had 4,700 employees and an annual turnover of US$983 million. The company then began to run into difficulties and John Sculley, a former president of Pepsi-Cola, was brought in to manage the business while Jobs concentrated on developing new computers, including the Apple Macintosh. Eventually a power struggle developed, and with Sculley now Chairman and Chief Executive, Jobs resigned in 1985 to set up his own computer company, NeXt.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    First National Technology Medal (with Wozniak) 1985.
    Further Reading
    J.S.Young, 1988, Steve Jobs: The Journey is the Reward: Scott Foresman \& Co. (includes a biography and a detailed account of Apple Company).
    M.Moritz, 1984, The Little Kingdom. The Private Story of Apple Computers.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Jobs, Steven Paul

  • 8 Iacocca, Lee A.

    (b. 1924) Gen Mgt
    U.S. business executive. President of the Ford Motor Company and subsequently Chairman and Chief Executive of the Chrysler Corporation. His experiences are described in Iacocca: an Autobiography (1985).

    The ultimate business dictionary > Iacocca, Lee A.

  • 9 CEO

    CEO (Abk. für Chief Executive Officer, AE) 1. MGT, PERS CEO m, Chief Executive Officer m, Vorsitzende m(f) der Geschäftsführung CEO; Vorsitzende m(f) des Exekutivausschusses (innerhalb des Board of Directors); 2. LAW Geschäftsführer m (the CEO is a member of the board of directors and the chairman of the executive committee, sometimes he is at the same time the chairman of the board or the president of the company; der CEO verantwortet die operative Führung des Tagesgeschäfts und der Unternehmenskontrolle, er berichtet an den Chairman of the Board, den Vorsitzenden des Verwaltungsrats, falls er dieses Amt nicht selbst in Personalunion als ‘Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive’ führt; cf Chief Executive Officer)

    Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > CEO

  • 10 chair

    Gen Mgt
    the most senior executive in an organization. The chair of an organization is responsible for running the annual meeting, and meetings of the board of directors. He or she may be a figurehead, appointed for prestige or power, and may have no role in the day-to-day running of the organization. Sometimes the roles of chair and chief executive are combined, and the chair then has more control over daily operations; sometimes the chair is a retired chief executive. In the United States, the person who performs this function is often called a president. Historically, the term chairman was more common. The terms chairwoman or chairperson are later developments, although chair is now the most generally acceptable. Chairman, however, remains in common use, especially in the corporate sector.

    The ultimate business dictionary > chair

  • 11 CEO

    упр. сокр. от chief executive officer

    statements by company CEOs and CFOs — официальные отчеты главных исполнительных директоров и главных финаансовых директоров компаний

    CEO is the highest ranking officer of he company. — Главный исполнительный директор является высшим должностным лицом компании.


    * * *
    abbrev.: CEO chief executive officer главный исполнительный директор: руководитель, который отвечает за основную часть текущей деятельности корпорации и исполнение решений совета директоров, часто совмещает также пост председателя совета директоров, президента, заместителя председателя совета и т. д.; см. chairman of the board.

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > CEO

  • 12 Barnevik, Percy

    (b. 1941) Gen Mgt
    Swedish business executive. Formerly chief executive, and now chairman, of Asea Brown Boveri, where he reduced bureaucracy, decentralized resources and authority, introduced a matrix management structure, and ran a global expansion strategy.

    The ultimate business dictionary > Barnevik, Percy

  • 13 _C

    The English annotation is below. (English-Russian) > _C

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