Stock Market Cafe
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Stock Market Cafe
No Result
View All Result
Home Trading News

Chanel’s Leena Nair joins an expanding tribe of global CEOs with Indian roots

by
December 16, 2021
in Trading News
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Leena Nair, the new CEO of Chanel.

There’s yet another person of Indian origin heading a global corporation.

RELATED POSTS

Buying the dip on energy stocks? Wall Street pros name their top picks

Energy agency chief warns transition to renewables is off track, issues warning on stranded assets

Leena Nair will be the new CEO for Chanel, the French luxury house announced in a press release yesterday (Dec. 14). She will take over from Alain Wertheimer, who will now be global chairman, in January. In her last stint, Nair was head of human resources at consumer goods giant Unilever in London.

Nike’s purchase of RTFKT hints at what its metaverse will look like

Her new role comes on the heels of recent high-profile appointments of people of Indian origin at global companies. After Jack Dorsey stepped down as CEO of Twitter on Nov. 29, he appointed Parag Agrawal, an Indian Institute of Technology Bombay graduate, to take his place. Similarly, Barclays appointed CS Venkatakrishnan as its CEO on Nov. 1 after Jes Staley stepped down unexpectedly.

Over the past decade, global conglomerates like PepsiCo, financial institutions like Mastercard, and Silicon Valley giants like Google and Microsoft have inducted Indian-origin talent into their top management.

Nair’s new association with Chanel continues that trend.

The US is delaying China’s dreams of a domestic chip supply chain

Who is Leena Nair?

Nair, now 52, was born in Kolhapur, a small town in the western state of Maharashtra. In 1990, she graduated in electronics and telecommunications engineering from the Walchand College of Engineering in the neighbouring Sangli district.

She then went to XLRI Jamshedpur for her MBA in human resources. Nair’s journey is also remarkable because she, unlike most CEOs of Indian origin, does not have an elite IIT pedigree.

After completing her MBA in 1992, she joined Hindustan Unilever, the Indian subsidiary of the British consumer goods company. In nearly 30 years of working with the company, she rose through the ranks from being a management trainee to the chief human resources officer at Unilever.

She now lives in the UK and is a citizen of that country.

Following her last promotion, Nair became the “first female, first Asian, youngest ever CHRO of Unilever, and member of the Unilever Leadership Executive, which is responsible for delivering Unilever’s business and financial performance,” according to her LinkedIn profile.

Nair has been vocal about the struggles she faced as a woman blazing a trail in a male-dominated corporate world.

Female CEOs and their challenges

In 2012, Nair spoke to Khaleej Times about learning how to “claw” her way up. It was something she learnt going to an engineering college. “It was 3,000 boys and 18 girls in engineering college and the four years there toughened me up, made me thick-skinned and I learnt how to claw my way through a largely male-dominated space.”

Things may have changed now, with women like Indra Nooyi at PepsiCo and Marissa Meyer’s erstwhile CEO position at Yahoo serving as aspirational figures for young women. But in Nair’s time, “There certainly were no female models for me to look up to or follow,” she told Khaleej Times.

As a human resources professional, Nair has been focused on making Unilever a more equal organisation, mirroring at least in gender diversity the real world, she wrote in a LinkedIn post.

In an episode of Learn With Leena, a podcast and newsletter she publishes on LinkedIn, she spoke about the need for paternity leave being key to the idea of diversity and inclusion. “If we want true gender equality, we have to make it easier for dads to share the parental duties.”

Sign up for the Quartz Daily Brief, our free daily newsletter with the world’s most important and interesting news.

More stories from Quartz:

Why China is becoming a top choice for Ghanaian PhD students

The Kellogg’s strike is testing the union’s theory of a labor shortage

ShareTweetPin

Related Posts

Buying the dip on energy stocks? Wall Street pros name their top picks

by
March 28, 2023
0

Energy was the second-best-performing sector of the S & P 500 last week, as investors flocked back into the stocks...

Energy agency chief warns transition to renewables is off track, issues warning on stranded assets

by
March 28, 2023
0

The current German coalition government is seeking to accelerate the country's transition away from fossil fuels and nuclear to renewable...

Chipotle to pay ex-employees $240,000 after closing Maine location that tried to unionize

by
March 28, 2023
0

In this article CMG Follow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT Chipotle Mexican Grill has agreed to pay $240,000 to the...

Most Americans think Trump did something illegal or unethical, poll finds

by
March 28, 2023
0

Former US President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event in Waco, Texas, US, on Saturday, March 25, 2023. Brandon...

This is not another banking crisis, analysts say — it’s ‘sentiment contagion’ instead

by
March 28, 2023
0

In this article .BBKA Follow your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNT A slogan is written on the sidewalk in front of...

Next Post

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Adobe, Airbnb, AT&T, Robinhood, Novartis and more

Stocks fall as post-Fed rally loses steam, Nasdaq retreats nearly 2%

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

email

Get the daily email about stock.

Please Enter Your Email Address:

By opting in you agree to our Privacy Policy. You also agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

MOST VIEWED

  • Crocs sees fourth-quarter sales up 42%, CEO Andrew Rees says 2021 was ‘exceptional year’

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Biden didn’t accept Putin’s ‘red lines’ on Ukraine – here’s what that means

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The states that won’t tax military retirement in 2022

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Buying a car from the factory sounds expensive, but it can actually save you money. Here’s how to do it.

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Citigroup Reports Earnings Soon. Here’s What Wall Street Is Watching.

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
All rights reserved by www.stockmarket-cafe.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy

All rights reserved by www.stockmarket-cafe.com