As we here in the United States are witness to a change in Government and a peaceful transfer of power, the Stock Market has seen all time highs. President Elect Trump and President Obama are due to meet shortly. The transition has begun in earnest as the buzz over Cabinet appointments are out there along as I await the arrival of the President-Elect. As the transition begins, the World is watching as the meeting begins. One of the key things to watch for is whether Mr. Trump will grow into the Job as the Democratic Tradition in the United States not withstanding all that Mr. Trump Alienated during the campaign. Here is the 100-Day Plan.
As another year winds down here at #Outsiders and the evolution continues, one of the coolest things I just picked up during my daily review was this from Fortune that Alan Murray on the Businessmen of the year as Outlined below as this "labor of love" continues:
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NOVEMBER 10, 2016 |
Good morning.
This morning, we unveil Fortune’s Business Person of the Year, an annual exercise that starts with our data guru Scott DeCarlo scouring the numbers, to sort out which businesses have performed best over a one-year and three-year period, and then adds in our editors’ judgments about each leader’s strategy, vision, and general influence on the world of business.
This year, that process led us inevitably to a man who is only 32 years old, but has built a powerhouse company worth $375 billion with $22 billion in profits and close to 1.8 billion users: Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg. His meteoric rise says something about the world in which we live – increasingly tied to the social networks at our fingertips – and also about the world of business, where digital companies can reach massive scale almost overnight. You can read Adam Lashinsky’s story on Zuckerberg’s unexpected management prowess here.
Number two on the list is another digital powerhouse, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, who not only dominates the world of e-commerce, but whose Amazon Web Services is powering the transformation of business, and whose voice-controlled Amazon Echo is pioneering the new computer interface. Adam profiled Bezos in March, here.
And then there is number three, Mary Dillon, who became CEO of Ulta Beauty in mid-2013 and since then has doubled sales and profits, increased profit margins, and scored hefty gains in same store sales. She soared to the top of our numbers screen, and is the rare success story in what otherwise has been a gloomy decade for retail. You can read Phil Wahba’s September story on her here.
The full Business Person of the Year list is here. |
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