Sponsored Links

Kamis, 24 Mei 2018

Sponsored Links

The Quotable Mary Barra | Stanford Graduate School of Business
src: www.gsb.stanford.edu

Mary Teresa Barra (née Makela; born December 24, 1961) is the Chairman and CEO of General Motors Company. She has held the CEO position since January 15, 2014, and she is the first female CEO of a major global automaker. On December 10, 2013, GM named her to succeed Dan Akerson as Chief Executive Officer, and prior to that, Barra served as the Executive Vice President of Global Product Development, Purchasing and Supply Chain at General Motors.


Video Mary Barra



Early life

Barra was born in Royal Oak, Michigan. Her father, Ray Mäkelä, worked as a die maker at Pontiac for 39 years. Barra's parents are of Finnish descent. Barra attended Waterford schools in Waterford, Michigan. She is a graduate of Waterford Mott High School. She started working in the automobile industry at just 18 years old checking fender panels and inspecting hoods to pay for her college tuition.


Maps Mary Barra



Education

Barra graduated from the General Motors Institute (now Kettering University), where she obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering. She then attended Stanford Graduate School of Business on a GM fellowship, receiving her Masters in Business Administration degree in 1990. In 2018, she received her Doctorate from Duke University, in presence on Duke 2018 commencement speaker and Apple CEO Tim Cook.


Mary Barra: What Every B-School Graduate Should Know | Stanford ...
src: www.gsb.stanford.edu


Career

General Motors

Barra started working for General Motors at the age of 18 as a co-op student in 1980 and subsequently held a variety of engineering and administrative positions, including managing the Detroit/Hamtramck Assembly plant.

In February 2008, she became Vice President of Global Manufacturing Engineering. In July 2009 she advanced to the position of Vice President of Global Human Resources, which she held until February 2011, when she was named Executive Vice President of Global Product Development. The latter position included responsibilities for design; she has worked to reduce the number of automobile platforms in GM. In August 2013, her Vice President responsibility was extended to include Global Purchasing and Supply Chain.

When Mary Barra took over as chief executive of General Motors in January 2014, she became the first ever female to head an automobile manufacturer.

During her first year as CEO, General Motors was forced to issue 84 safety recalls involving over 30 million cars. Barra was called before the Senate to testify about the recalls and deaths attributed to the faulty ignition switch. Barra and General Motors also came under suspicion of paying for awards to burnish the CEO and corporation's image during that time. The recalls led to the creation of new policies encouraging workers to report problems they encounter, thereby altering the company culture.

Over the course of her tenure as CEO, Barra has pushed GM as a company transitioning into the tech space pushing forward in the automated driverless car space with major acquisitions including Strobe, a startup focused on driverless technology. Barra strives to make sure the customer is at the center of every decision made by General Motors. Also in 2017 she pushed GM to develop the Chevy Bolt EV, beating rival Tesla in developing the first electric car with a range of 200 miles.

Disney

In August 2017, she was elected to the board of Disney. She is the 12th person elected to this board. Robert Iger, the CEO of Disney, has this to say about Barra:

Beyond being an incredibly respected leader of a major U.S. company, Mary is recognized as an agent of change with a relentless focus on quality, safety and, most importantly, consumers. Her ability to adapt to a changing technological and consumer-focused landscape makes her uniquely suited for the Disney board.

Barra and GM partnered with Disney on the attraction Test Track, located in Epcot at Disney World in Orlando.

Other Boards and Councils

Barra is a member of the General Dynamics Board of Directors. She serves on the Board of Directors of the Detroit Economic Club and as a member of The Business Council. She is also a member of the Stanford University Board of Trustees, the Stanford Graduate School of Business Advisory Council and the Board of Trustees for the Detroit Country Day School.


Mary Barra on Twitter:
src: pbs.twimg.com


Awards and honors

Barra was listed as one of the world's most powerful women by Forbes, for the fifth time, in 2016. She was most recently listed as the fifth Most Powerful Women, rising from 35th in 2013.

On May 3, 2014, she delivered the Spring Commencement address for University of Michigan's Ann Arbor campus at Michigan Stadium. She received an honorary degree.

Barra was listed number one in Fortune's Most Powerful Women list in 2015, moving from second place the year before.

She remained in the number one spot in Fortune's Most Powerful Women of 2017 and Number 5 on Forbes World's 100 Most Powerful Women List in the same year.

In April 2014, Barra was featured on the cover of Time's "100 Most Influential People in the World."

In December 2016, Barra joined a business forum assembled by then President-Elect Trump to provide strategic and policy advice on economic issues. However, she left the forum in 2017, following Trump's response to the Charlottesville protests.


Mary Barra: Simplify Bureaucracy, and Don't Be Afraid To Job Hop ...
src: www.gsb.stanford.edu


Personal life

Family

Barra is married to consultant Tony Barra, whom she met while studying at Kettering University, and has two children. The family lives in Northville, a suburb of Detroit.

Interests

She has named the Chevrolet Camaro and the Pontiac Firebird as her favorite cars.


GM CEO Mary Barra Puts Recalls into Context - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


References


GM CEO Mary Barra: Tax reform won't change profit-sharing system
src: fm.cnbc.com


External links

Source of the article : Wikipedia

Comments
0 Comments