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6 - United careers of small numbers at the top

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

José Luis Alvarez
Affiliation:
Instituto de Empresa, Madrid
Silviya Svejenova
Affiliation:
ESADE Business School, Barcelona
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Summary

[I]f you are a passionate leader, intuitive and charismatic, look for a trustworthy and confident manager to counterbalance you. If you are a lover of numbers, security and rigor, try to share your career with a loony visionary.

Cubeiro, 1998

For six years, we shared a job at Fleet Bank: vice president, global markets foreign exchange. One desk, one chair, one computer, one telephone, and one voice-mail account. We had – still have – one résumé. To our clients and colleagues, we were effectively one person with the strengths and ideas of two … when we look for a new job, we will look together. If one of us wants to leave our next position, the other will leave as well … For the foreseeable future, we are a package.

Cunningham and Murray, 2005, p. 125

The August 2004 issue of Vanity Fair carried an article entitled “So Very Valentino,” which claimed to provide a “never-before look at the devoted, passionate ‘family’ behind one of the world's richest fashion empires” (Tyrnauer, 2004, p. 94). It was the story of the fashion designer Valentino Garavani and “his business partner, onetime boyfriend, alter ego, and closest companion” (Tyrnauer, 2004, p. 96), Giancarlo Giammetti. Countess Consuelo Crespi, the Rome-based fashion editor of American Vogue, summarized their strengths succinctly as “the brains of Giancarlo mixed with the talent and determination of Valentino” (Tyrnauer, 2004, p. 96).

Type
Chapter
Information
Sharing Executive Power
Roles and Relationships at the Top
, pp. 172 - 202
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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