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THE NEW RIGHT STUFF AND 11 FUTURE CEOS WHO HAVE IT

Fortune US

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June - July 2023

Having decades of experience isn't enough in today's shifting corporate landscape. Vulnerability, humility, and self-awareness are among the qualities that high-potential first-time CEOS must cultivate.

- Geoff Colvin

THE NEW RIGHT STUFF AND 11 FUTURE CEOS WHO HAVE IT

IN A FAST-CHANGING world profoundly transformed by the pandemic and the blistering advance of technology, a world in which the past offers ever less guidance, the CEO's job is being reconceived.

For the star CEOs of the 21st century, success will depend heavily on their ability to confront a pair of almost contradictory requirements: They must plumb their deepest humanity, and they must foresee technology's greatest opportunities and threats. Mastering either challenge is difficult. Mastering both is extraordinary-but then, that's what CEOs are supposed to be.

"What matters for the role now is more about the intrinsics, the intangibles, and less about specific experience," says Cathy Anterasian, a CEO succession expert at the Spencer Stuart leadership consulting firm. Indeed, Anterasian cites the firm's research showing that high potential first-time CEOs who "don't have that baggage" tend to outperform those with many years of experience, delivering higher market-adjusted total shareholder return and lower volatility. Alan Johnson, a compensation consultant, agrees: "If you've got 30 years of experience, probably the first 20 are not relevant anymore." Who will take the reins in this new landscape? With the help of executive search veterans and industry experts (who asked not to be named so as not to show favoritism), Fortune has identified 11 CEO stars in the making-many of them already in the C-suite, and all potential large company CEOs. They range in age from 33 to 56, and each was identified by one or more experts who see a generational standout leader in the making.

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WITH ITS V-SHAPED BASE and sloping windows that cantilever outward over the Chicago River, the 54-story skyscraper that houses Hyatt Hotels' headquarters is a “statement” building that awes tourists and architecture buffs alike.

time to read

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time to read

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time to read

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HOW NETFLIX SWALLOWED HOLLYWOOD

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time to read

5 mins

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THE AI DATA CENTER BOOM PITS RURAL AMERICA AGAINST SILICON VALLEY BILLIONS

FACING A PROPOSAL FOR A MASSIVE FACILITY IN THE ARIZONA DESERT, LOCALS FIND THEMSELVES IN A BATTLE THEY NEVER WANTED-OVER ENERGY, WATER, LAND, AND WHO GETS TO DECIDE HOW THE AI ERA TAKES SHAPE.

time to read

12 mins

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INVEST LEARNING TO LOVE BONDS

MANY INVESTORS regard bonds as the frumpier cousins to stocks. Their prices rarely pop or plummet. They usually deliver a lower return, and—aside from a glamorous cameo in the 1980s thriller Die Hard— they are not part of popular culture in the same way as, say, GameStop or Tesla shares. They are, though, a critical part of any well-managed portfolio, and with the stock market looking particularly frothy, this may be more true than ever.

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time to read

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DETERMINED NOT TO REPEAT THE BRAND'S PAST MISTAKES, CEO HILLARY SUPER IS SHEDDING THE BODY-SHAMING AND THE PERFORMATIVE BOX-CHECKING—BUT NOT THE WINGS, GLAMOUR, AND GLITTER.

time to read

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