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[轉貼] 雅虎前CEO Marissa Mayer 命盤

梅麗莎·梅爾[編輯]

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梅麗莎·安·梅爾
Marissa Mayer, 2011 Interview (crop).jpg
英文名 Marissa Ann Mayer
出生 1975年5月30日(41歲)
 美國威斯康辛州沃索
居住地  美國舊金山帕羅奧圖
國籍  美國
母校 史丹佛大學
職業 Yahoo!總裁與執行長[1]
史丹佛大學軟體程式設計師
僱主 Yahoo
史丹佛大學
董事會 舊金山現代藝術博物館舊金山市芭蕾舞團紐約市芭蕾舞團Cooper–Hewitt, National Design Museum 以及沃爾瑪[2]
配偶 扎卡里·博格(Zachary Bogue,2009–至今)[3]

梅麗莎·安·梅爾英語:Marissa Ann Mayer,1975年5月30日),又譯為瑪麗莎·梅耶爾,生於美國威斯康辛州沃索(Wausau),美國企業家,曾任谷歌發言人與副執行長,現任雅虎執行長。此外,她還是多家公司董事會的成員,其中包括沃爾瑪等。

生平[編輯]

畢業於史丹佛大學,符號系統(symbolic systems)學士,資訊工程碩士,專長人工智慧。1999年加入google,是Google第20位員工,也是Google第一位女性工程師。[4][5] 梅麗莎·梅爾在Google工作的13年里曾任職工程師,設計師,產品經理以及公司副總裁。

2012年7月17日,雅虎宣布由她出任執行長。[6]

私人生活與家庭[編輯]

  • 2009年,與扎卡里·博格(Zachary Bogue)結婚 [7] 
  • 2012年10月,產下一子 [8][9][10]
  • 2015年12月10日早晨,雙胞胎女兒誕生 [11][12]

 

https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E6%A2%85%E9%BA%97%E8%8E%8E%C2%B7%E6%A2%85%E7%88%BE

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雅虎美女CEO下台 資遣費2300萬美元

梅耶擔任雅虎CEO任內兩度遭駭。資料照片

字級:

 
 
 

雅虎(Yahoo)執行長梅耶(Marissa Mayer)將在Verizon收購雅虎程序完成後下台,公司將支付她2300萬美元(約7億台幣)的資遣費。美國有線電視新聞網(CNN)報導,雅虎周一發表聲明,確定將在併購完成後終止梅耶職務。2016年7月,雅虎同意將網路資產賣給Verizon。但同年9月和12月,雅虎自爆用戶個資曾被駭客入侵,2起入侵事件均有動輒5到10億名用戶受害,幾度傳出Verizon考慮毀婚。最後雙方在上個月達成協議,以44.8億美元(約1400億台幣)收購拍板定案。有鑑於兩起事件皆在梅耶任內發生,並且雅虎後續處理未臻完善,雅虎董事決定不支付她應有的2016年的現金紅利。梅耶下台後,新的執行長將由雅虎董事麥金納尼(Thomas McInerney)接任,不過Verizon併購雅虎核心網路事業後,剩下的公司將改名為Altaba,由「alternate」和阿里巴巴「Alibaba」兩個字組合而成。至於梅耶下台後,是否會轉任Verizon旗下的雅虎網路事業,目前還不得而知。(北美中心/綜合外電報導)


 

http://www.appledaily.com.tw/realtimenews/article/new/20170314/1075774/

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Marissa Mayer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the Yahoo CEO. For the novelist, see Marissa Meyer.
Marissa Mayer
Marissa Mayer May 2014 (cropped).jpg
Marissa Mayer in 2014
Born Marissa Ann Mayer
May 30, 1975 (age 41)
Wausau, Wisconsin, U.S.
Residence
Nationality American
Alma mater Stanford University
Occupation
Employer Yahoo!
Salary USD $27.8 million (excluding benefits)
Net worth Increase USD $516 million[4]
Political party Democratic
Board member of
Spouse(s) Zachary Bogue (m. 2009)[7]
Children 1 son
2 daughters

Marissa Ann Mayer (/ˈmər/; born May 30, 1975) is an American information technology executive, currently serving as the president and chief executive officer of Yahoo!, a position she has held since July 2012. She is expected to resign her position as CEO, having resigned[8] from the Yahoo board on 10 January 2017. She is a graduate ofStanford, and was a long-time executive, usability leader, and key spokesperson for Google.[9][10][11]

Early life and education[edit]

Mayer was born in Wausau, Wisconsin, the daughter of Margaret Mayer, an art teacher ofFinnish descent,[12] and Michael Mayer, an environmental engineer who worked for water companies.[13][14][15] Her grandfather, Clem Mayer, had polio when he was 7 and served as mayor ofJackson, Wisconsin, for 32 years.[16][17][18] She has a younger brother.[13] As a child, Mayer was "painfully shy."[19] She "never had fewer than one after-school activity per day," participating in ballet, ice-skating, piano, swimming, debate, andBrownies.[13] During middle school and high school, she took piano and ballet lessons, the latter of which taught her "criticism and discipline, poise and confidence."[19] At an early age, she showed an interest in math and science.[20]

When she was attending Wausau West High School, Mayer was on the curling team and the precision dance team.[19] She excelled in chemistry, calculus, biology, and physics.[21] She took part in extracurricular activities, becoming president of her high school's Spanish club, treasurer of the Key Club, captain of the debate team, and captain of the pom-pom squad.[19] Her high school debate team won the Wisconsin state championship and the pom-pom squad was the state runner-up.[16] During high school, she worked as a grocery clerk,[22] where she memorized the number codes for produce items to streamline the checkout process.[20] After graduating from high school in 1993,[23] Mayer was selected by Tommy Thompson, then the Governor of Wisconsin, as one of the state's two delegates to attend the National Youth Science Camp in West Virginia.[24]

Intending to become a pediatric neurosurgeon,[25] Mayer took pre-med classes at Stanford University.[19] She later switched her major from pediatric neuroscience to symbolic systems,[26]a major which combined philosophy, cognitive psychology, linguistics, and computer science.[13]At Stanford, she danced in the university ballet's Nutcracker, was a member of parliamentary debate, volunteered at children's hospitals, and helped bring computer science education to Bermuda's schools.[27] During her junior year, she taught a class in symbolic systems, with Eric S. Roberts as her supervisor. The class was so well received by students that Roberts asked Mayer to teach another class over the summer.[19] Mayer went on to graduate with honors from Stanford with a BS in symbolic systems in 1997[26][27] and an MS in computer science in 1999.[28] For both degrees, her specialization was in artificial intelligence. For her undergraduate thesis, she built travel-recommendation software that advised users in natural-sounding human language.[25] In 2009, the Illinois Institute of Technology granted Mayer an honoris causadoctorate degree in recognition of her work in the field of search.[29][30]

Mayer interned at SRI International in Menlo Park, California, and Ubilab, UBS's research lab based in Zurich, Switzerland.[25] She holds several patents in artificial intelligence and interface design.[31][32]

Career[edit]

Google[edit]

Marissa Mayer speaking at the Google "Search On" event in 2010.

After graduating from Stanford, Mayer received 14 job offers,[26] including a teaching job at Carnegie Mellon University[27] and a consulting job at McKinsey & Company.[19] She joined Google in 1999 as employee number 20 and was the company's first female engineer.[33][34] She started out writing code and overseeing small teams of engineers, developing and designing Google's search offerings.[10] She became known for her attention to detail[35] which helped land her a promotion to product manager,[36] and later became director of consumer web products.[16][37] She oversaw the layout of Google's well-known, unadorned search homepage.[37][38][39] She was also on the three-person team responsible for Google AdWords, which is an algorithm used by advertisers to get insight into the products consumers want. AdWords helped deliver 96% of the company's revenue in the first quarter of 2011.

Marissa Mayer at an interview while working for Google.

In 2002, Mayer started the Associate Product Manager (APM) program, a Google mentorship program aimed to recruit new talents and cultivate and train them for leadership roles within the company. Each year, Mayer selected a number of junior employees for the two-year program, which would see them take on a number of extracurricular assignments and intensive evening classes.[19][35][40] Notable graduates of the program include Bret Taylor and Justin Rosenstein.[40] In 2005 she became Vice President of Search Products and User Experience.[41] Mayer held key roles in Google Search, Google Images, Google News, Google Maps, Google Books, Google Product Search, Google Toolbar, iGoogle, and Gmail.[42]

Mayer was the vice president of Google Product Search until the end of 2010, when she was demoted[43] by then-CEO Eric Schmidt to head the Local, Maps, and Location Services.[35][44] In 2011, she secured Google's acquisition of survey site Zagat for $125 million.[35] While Mayer was working at Google, she taught introductory computer programming at Stanford and mentored students at the East Palo Alto Charter School.[16][25] She was awarded the Centennial Teaching Award and the Forsythe Award from Stanford.[45]

Yahoo![edit]

Michael Arrington and Marissa Mayer at TechCrunch Disrupt

On July 16, 2012, Mayer was appointed president and CEO of Yahoo!, effective the following day. She is also a member of the company's board of directors.[46][47] To simplify the bureaucratic process and "make the culture the best version of itself", Mayer launched a new online program called PB&J. It collects employee complaints, as well as their votes on problems in the office; if a problem generates at least 50 votes, online management automatically investigates the matter.[48] In February 2013, Mayer oversaw a major personnel policy change at Yahoo! that required all remote-working employees to convert to in-office roles.[49] Having worked from home toward the end of her pregnancy, Mayer returned to work after giving birth to a boy, and had a nursery built next to her office suite—Mayer was consequently criticized for thetelecommuting ban.[50] In April 2013, Mayer changed Yahoo!'s maternity leave policy, lengthening its time allowance and providing a cash bonus to parents.[51] CNN noted this was in line with other Silicon Valley companies, such as Facebook and Google.[52][53] Mayer has been criticized for many of her management decisions in pieces by The New York Times and The New Yorker.[54][55]

On May 20, 2013, Mayer led Yahoo! to acquire Tumblr in a $1.1 billion acquisition.[56][57] In February 2016, Yahoo! acknowledged that the value of Tumblr had fallen by $230 million since it was acquired. In July 2013, Yahoo! reported a fall in revenues, but a rise in profits compared with the same period in the previous year. Reaction on Wall Street was muted, with shares falling 1.7%.[58] In September 2013, it was reported that the stock price of Yahoo! had doubled over the 14 months since Mayer's appointment.[59] However, much of this growth may be attributed to Yahoo!'s stake in the Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba Group, which was acquired before Mayer's tenure.[60]

Mayer delivering a conferencekeynote.

In November 2013, Mayer instituted a performance review system based on a bell curve ranking of employees, suggesting that managers rank their employees on a bell curve, with those at the low end being fired.[61][62] Employees complained that some managers were viewing the process as mandatory.[62] In February 2016, a former Yahoo! employee filed a lawsuit against the company claiming that Yahoo's firing practices have violated California law.[63]

In 2014, Mayer was ranked sixth on Fortune's 40 under 40 list,[64] and was ranked the 16th most-powerful businesswoman in the world that year according to the same publication.[65] In March 2016 Fortune would name Mayer as one of the world's most disappointing leaders.[66]

In 2014, Mayer was heavily criticized for many of her management decisions in articles by The New York Times and The New Yorker.[54][55] Yahoo! stocks continued to fall by more than 30% throughout 2015, while 12 key executives left the company.[67] In December 2015, the New York-based hedge fund SpringOwl, a shareholder in Yahoo Inc., released a statement arguing that Mayer be replaced as CEO.[68] Starboard Value, an activist investing firm that owns a stake in Yahoo, likewise wrote a scathing letter regarding Mayer's performance at Yahoo.[69] By January 2016, it was further estimated that Yahoo!'s core business has been worth less than zero dollars for the past few quarters.[70] In February 2016, Mayer confirmed that Yahoo! was considering the possibility of selling its core business.[71] In May 2016, it was revealed that Mayer would receive $55 million if she is terminated without cause within one year of Yahoo!'s sale.[72]. In January 2017, Mayer resigned[73] from the Yahoo! board.

Mayer with the House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, May 3, 2014

Allegations of misandry[edit]

Scott Ard, a prominent editorial director, fired from Yahoo! in 2015, has filed a lawsuit accusing Mayer of leading a sexist campaign to purge male employees. Ard, a male employee, stated “Mayer encouraged and fostered the use of (an employee performance-rating system) to accommodate management’s subjective biases and personal opinions, to the detriment of Yahoo!’s male employees”. In the suit, Ard claimed that, prior to his firing, he had received "fully satisfactory" performance reviews since starting at the company in 2011 as head of editorial programming for Yahoo!'s home page; however, he was relieved of his role, which was given to a woman who had been recently hired.[74][75][76]

A second sexual discrimination lawsuit was filed separately by Gregory Anderson, who was fired in 2014, alleging the company’s performance management system was arbitrary and unfair, making it the second sexism lawsuit Yahoo! and Mayer have faced in 2016. [77][78][79]

Boards and honors[edit]

As well as sitting on the boards of directors of Walmart, Jawbone, and Yahoo! Mayer also sits on several non-profit boards such as Cooper–Hewitt, National Design Museum, New York City Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.[80][81][82][83] Mayer actively invests in technology companies, including crowd-sourced design retailer Minted,[84][85]live video platform Airtime,[85] wireless power startup uBeam,[85] online DIY community/e-commerce company Brit + Co.,[85][86] mobile payments processor Square,[85] home décor site One Kings Lane,[85][87] genetic testing company Natera,[85] and nootropics and biohackingcompany Nootrobox.[88]

Mayer was named to Fortune magazine's annual list of America's 50 Most Powerful Women in Business in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013 with ranks at 50, 44, 42, 38, 14 and 8 respectively.[89] In 2008, at age 33, she was the youngest woman ever listed. Mayer was named one of Glamour Magazine's Women of the Year in 2009.[90] She was listed in ForbesMagazine's List of The World's 100 Most Powerful Women in 2012, 2013 and 2014, with ranks of 20, 32 and 18 respectively. In September 2013, Mayer became the first CEO of a Fortune 500company to be featured in a Vogue magazine spread.[13] In 2013, she was also named in theTime 100 and became the first woman listed as number one on Fortune magazine's annual list of the top 40 business stars under 40 years old.[91] Mayer eventually made Fortune magazine history in 2013, as the only person to feature in all three of its annual lists during the same year: Businessperson of the Year (No. 10), Most Powerful Women (at No. 8), and 40 Under 40 (No. 1) at the same time.[92] On 24 December 2015, Mayer was listed by UK-based company Richtopiaat number 14 in the list of 500 Most Influential CEO's.[93] In March 2016, in contrast, Fortunenamed Mayer as one of the world's most disappointing leaders.[66]

Personal life[edit]

Mayer married lawyer and investor Zachary Bogue on December 12, 2009.[36][94][95] On the day Yahoo! announced her hiring, Mayer revealed that she was pregnant;[96][97][98] she gave birth to a baby boy on September 30, 2012.[99] Although she asked for suggestions via social media,[100]the name Macallister was eventually chosen for her baby's name from an existing list.[101] On December 10, 2015, Mayer announced that she had given birth to identical twin girls,[102][103]Marielle and Sylvana.[104]

Mayer is Lutheran,[105] but said, referencing Vince Lombardi's "Your God, your family and theGreen Bay Packers" quote, her priorities are "God, family and Yahoo!, except I'm not that religious, so it's really family and Yahoo!."[106] Since 2008, Mayer has lived in the 38th-floor penthouse suite at the Four Seasons Hotel in San Francisco.[19][42]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marissa_Mayer

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不怕辛苦,就怕不公平;不怕卑微,就怕不公義。
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