from Too Much: A Commentary on Excess and Inequality:
Why Almost Anybody Can Be a CEOAugust 22, 2010
The takeaway from the latest top gun flame-out at Hewlett-Packard: Chief executive ’success,’ in America today, essentially demands no more than greed and a developmentally arrested ego.By Sam Pizzigati
The tall tales we’ve inherited from ages long gone we call myths. The tall tales that spook our contemporary everyday life we call “urban legends.” But we’ve yet to come up with a label for the tall tales that Corporate America showers down upon us.
These corporate tall tales, unlike urban legends, actually make a difference in our lives. Corporate tall tales don’t just drive the decisions that drive our economy. They drive these decisions in a reckless direction. And the most reckless of these drivers? That may be the tall tale of the “rare talent.”
We’ve heard this whopper quite a bit over recent decades. Running a major corporation, we’re told, takes enormous — and exceedingly rare — executive talent. To get this top talent, and keep it, firms have no choice but to pay top dollar and then some. If they don’t, they’ll never succeed in the fiercely competitive global marketplace, and we’ll all be doomed.
Five years ago, the corporate board at America’s premiere technology company, Hewlett-Packard, anointed Mark Hurd one of these rare talents and named him HP’s new CEO. Earlier this month, that same HP board shoved a disgraced Hurd out the door, the same door that Hurd’s rare and talented predecessor, Carly Fiorina, had been shoved out of early in 2005.
Out goes one “rare” talent, in goes another. This CEO revolving door has become Corporate America’s standard operating procedure. Major companies — high-tech giants like Yahoo, retailers like Home Depot, financial kingpins like Merrill Lynch — routinely shell out fortunes to sign wonderfully “special” talents they then proceed, a few years later, to ingloriously dump.
But none of these dumpings ever seem to dent the corporate demand for CEO superstar “talent.” Corporate boards simply dispatch their failed talents off into the sunset, with generous severance packages, and proudly announce their new corporate savior du jour — and that savior’s generous sign-on package. ...........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://toomuchonline.org/why-almost-anybody-can-be-a-ceo/