Boeing, Nike and Starbucks have all changed their chief executives in recent months. But just how important is the person in the top job for the successful running of such huge companies?
“There’s only one cat who’s on the hot seat,” says Alan Lafley, who was CEO of global consumer goods giant Procter & Gamble from 2000 to 2010, and then again from 2013 to 2015.
With P&G selling everything from Pampers nappies, to Head & Shoulders shampoo, and Fairy washing up liquid, it has more than five billion customers around the world. And its workforce now exceeds 107,000 people.
Mr Lafley equates leading a firm of that vast size with being the manager of one of England’s Premier League football teams. Specifically, he says the job comes with the same risk of being sacked if results are not as good as expected.
“With the football players, if they have a bad season, they're not gone,” he says. “Instead it is the coach or manager that’s going to go.”