Craig Barrett: Intel's CEO | 克雷格·巴雷特:英特尔首席执行官

点击查看中英对照

Craig Barrett
AGE: 59 | Intel | 3-year return: 318% | CEO since: 1998

At least life at the top hasn't been dull for Barrett, the 25-year Intel veteran who stepped into the CEO slot at the beginning of 1998. Since then, the company has been blindsided by the sudden rise of the market for sub-$1,000 PCs, had its dirty laundry aired at the Microsoft antitrust trial, and settled a patent-infringement complaint by the U.S. Justice Department even as the feds continue to probe other Intel business practices. Worst of all, two Intel employees were murdered under horrifying circumstances in Uganda in early March. Throughout this trying time, Barrett has maintained his focus on Intel's manufacturing operations. For good reason: As microchips find their way into ever more non-PC devices, they will have to become even smaller and more versatile. "You need a guy like Barrett to manage that transition," says Cowen & Co. analyst Drew Peck.

Business Philosophy: Look ahead rather than back. Set high expectations, and meet deadlines.

Headache: Competitors such as Advanced Micro Devices, which was much quicker than Intel to spot the growth potential of sub-$1,000 PCs.

True story: In 1986, when Japan ruled the semiconductor market, Barrett learned everything he could about Japanese manufacturing practices. He applied what he learned at Intel's chip-fabrication plants. Today, the Japanese emulate Intel.

Management Style: A plant-floor guy. Before he was named CEO, he personally inspected each of Intel's dozens of fabrication plants around the world. Former CEO Andy Grove joked that Barrett had collected enough frequent-flier miles to buy his own airline.

Personal Strengths: Detail-oriented and disciplined. And to the relief of those weary of his predecessor's fractious and intimidating style, he's not Andy Grove.

Habits: Works in a nine-foot-square gray cubicle, like everyone else at Intel. Always takes the stairs up and down the five flights to his office space. Picks up after litterbugs.

Resume highlight: Before he joined Intel, he was a tenured Stanford professor (he holds a Ph.D. in materials science).

How he got the job: Worked hand-in-glove with Grove for 24 years.

Other interest: Outdoor sports, especially fly-fishing.

Corporate goal: To make Intel's existing plants even more productive and efficient.

Financial reward: Barrett owns more than 840,000 Intel shares, worth in excess of $100 million.

阅读记录
请先 登录 后记录阅读完成
为这篇文章评分
点击星星进行评分(1-5分)
相关文章
Steve Jobs: The Dual-CEO | 史蒂夫·乔布斯:双重身份的CEO

This article profiles Steve Jobs in 1997, highlighting hi...

apple biography
The Future Organization Plan | 未来的组织架构图

An executive presents a satirical "future organization pl...

business future
What's Your Business? | 你的职业是什么?

A cowboy outsmarts a technologically savvy stranger who u...

beginner business
The Brick Test | 砖块测试

A satirical guide to job placement by observing how new h...

business humor
The Hardest Task in a Stable | 马棚里最难做的事

Duke Huan of Qi asks about the hardest stable task. Minis...

ancient-wisdom educational
Russell T. Lewis: CEO of The New York Times | 罗素·T·刘易斯:纽约时报首席执行官

This profile details Russell T. Lewis's tenure as CEO of ...

business corporate-strategy
Teen Entrepreneurs | 少年创业者

The article highlights the rise of teen entrepreneurship,...

business e-commerce
Andrew Carnegie | 安德鲁·卡内基

Andrew Carnegie built the U.S. steel industry and amassed...

american-industrialist biography
To Drum Up Business | 招揽生意

A man's comical slip on a banana peel attracts opportunis...

beginner business
Unselfish Recommendation | 大公无私

The story of Qi Huangyang from the Spring and Autumn Peri...

ancient-wisdom chinese-history
The Boss Parrot | 老板鹦鹉

A customer inquires about three parrots with vastly diffe...

beginner business
The Judge and the Plaintiff | 法官与原告

A judge hints at a pending ruling to a plaintiff, who off...

business dialogue
The Businessman's Solution | 商人的解决方案

A family buys a large watchdog that fails to alert them d...

anecdote business
No Matter What | 无论如何

A man receives contradictory advice on how to dress for a...

business dialogue
The Customer Is Always Right | 顾客永远是对的

A shop manager scolds an employee for arguing with a cust...

beginner business
Michael Dell's Two-Billion-Dollar Dream | 戴尔的20亿美元梦想

This article chronicles the entrepreneurial journey of Mi...

biography business
Millionaire | 百万富翁

A CEO humorously remarks that his wife turned him into a ...

business dialogue
The Unyielding President Lincoln | 永不退缩的林肯总统

The article chronicles Abraham Lincoln's numerous politic...

biography educational
Psychology in Action | 心理学的妙用

A captain uses tailored psychological appeals based on na...

business cultural-differences
Moving the Thill to the South Gate | 徒辕南门

Wu Qi cleverly built public trust by fulfilling small pro...

ancient-china educational