techtony
Geektator
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2015
- Messages
- 122
So let's look at Iger, not the board. The board is there for guidance and oversight - but Iger is where the buck stops.
Since Iger took over Disney, the company has seen growth and a resurgence of the brand. To me that is a success. Now we all know that Iger has already decided to leave - as any CEO should - leave on a high note. The next CEO has likely already been selected and is laying in wait.
People somehow believe that you must be in the CEO club to be a great CEO. Basically, the pool of CEOs go from company to company because they think only prior CEOs are qualified and yes, there are lots of "i'll scratch your back if you scratch mine" going on in this club. The truth is, each company already has a valuable asset amongst their ranks. It used to be common for people to climb the corporate ladder and eventually prove themselves worthy as the CEO. In today's world though, companies almost always look outside of their ranks or someone on the Board is elected - but they are almost always members of the CEO club.
When the current pool of recycles CEO's dies out or retires, we may see the old system come back.
Igers salary was the point of this post - and personally I do not like the excessive compensation of CEOs, I think it is ridiculous. Should we cap their salaries? No - we can't and shouldn't.
Since Iger took over Disney, the company has seen growth and a resurgence of the brand. To me that is a success. Now we all know that Iger has already decided to leave - as any CEO should - leave on a high note. The next CEO has likely already been selected and is laying in wait.
People somehow believe that you must be in the CEO club to be a great CEO. Basically, the pool of CEOs go from company to company because they think only prior CEOs are qualified and yes, there are lots of "i'll scratch your back if you scratch mine" going on in this club. The truth is, each company already has a valuable asset amongst their ranks. It used to be common for people to climb the corporate ladder and eventually prove themselves worthy as the CEO. In today's world though, companies almost always look outside of their ranks or someone on the Board is elected - but they are almost always members of the CEO club.
When the current pool of recycles CEO's dies out or retires, we may see the old system come back.
Igers salary was the point of this post - and personally I do not like the excessive compensation of CEOs, I think it is ridiculous. Should we cap their salaries? No - we can't and shouldn't.