Whew, lots o' people!
Guess I'll have to reply to you all in one post...
Ei$ner (look what I did!) is not my fave guy.
But he's all you're gonna get.
Eisner took huge wages, made some bad purchases and fired an entire board of directors.
BUT.
That board of directors had driven Disney into a $2bn company. In return for his huge wages he enlarged the company more than thirty times over (to a $61bn company) and did so fairly efficiently. He spread income over all areas of interest, making the company less susceptible to the whims of the economy and made the name into the major thing it is today.
SO. He's done good and bad.
Let's not insult everyone here by suggesting that the head of a company can't make mistakes. They shouldn't but they do. That's where you gamble when you 'enlist' one. Look at poor old Microsoft. Apple. IBM. Gründig. Rover. Ericsson. Acorn. Be. British Airways. It may seem shocking in a land of dreams, but there is always a mistake - or string of mistakes - just waiting to be made. The test as a leader is how you handle them - the objective is survival and eventual growth.
He's done that, although I will agree that last year it was questionable as to whether he'd pull it off at all. Lucky so and so.
Now, as far as I've ascertained, the basis for hating Eisner lies in two directions. First, that at the moment Disney is failing. Actually, it's making money and growing. The other is that in the past he's failed Disney. Interesting, given that Roy recruited him to stop Disney from disappearing forever.
You see, for what harm Eisner has done, he's done more good overall. And if you're under the impression that high power CEOs grow on trees, you may be in for a reality check. Hard headed people like Murdoch (spelling?) and Jobs just don't pop up on demand. Roy was lucky at the time to find Eisner - companies were preparing hostile bids and, when the first one was to be made and Roy had to leave [in order to face it off], Eisner had to be called in to stop subsequent attacks. The amount of growth he instigated prevented any further bids and even the current one made by Comcast looks set to fade away as Disney is becoming rapidly larger than Comcast once again.
I don't like Eisner. But he works. Sad fact. And every time he's been challenged in the past, he's won, one way or another.
If you spend your time following your dreams, listening to your heart and believing in yourself, you'll be beaten to a pulp by those who work hard for their money and fly hell bent on furthering themselves.
Sad fact.
Rich::
[ps. Boston Business is great! We law students all get it here because it gives a pleasant sight into American Business scraps

As for the BBC - well, it's enormous and not owned by Roy or Michael - probably the best source to trust, bar for the slightly more clinical CNN (which I also love

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