Word: cantalupo
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...wait for outdated weekly, much less quarterly, sales reports. Every day he checks sales totals in all 118 countries with McDonald's franchises. "I'm a results guy," says Bell, 43. "I like knowing." The Australian-born Bell joined the company's new management team when James Cantalupo became CEO early this year. That means Bell is in line to eventually become the first non-American to head the iconic U.S. company...
While it is tragic that many more fortunate citizens do not always feel the urge to give back to those with less, each and every American must be respected as an individual. Individual rights are a fundamental basis for humanity. James R. Cantalupo, the CEO of McDonald’s, is just as much an individual as a cashier in one of his corporation’s chain restaurants. Though externally he probably leads a much different life, and financially he surely has far more in his pockets, he is no different fundamentally than any of the thousands of workers...
...influence over the influential is what gives his views so much currency. His position on an issue inspires strategy in places where he holds no board seat or investment stake. Look again at the earnings-guidance issue. Daft sought out Buffett. McDonald's made its announcement after CEO Jim Cantalupo had turned to one of his advisers--Don Keough, a former long-time Coke executive and FOB (Friend of Buffett). Keough had adopted Buffett's view. On the question of expensing stock options, Cathleen Black, president of Hearst Magazines, who sits with Buffett on the Coke board, has broached...
...Indigenizing" McDonald's has been a major component of adapting the brand to its global role - more of the company's earnings today come from abroad than from its U.S. outlets. As former McDonald's President James Cantalupo had said in 1991, the company's strategy was to make itself "as much part of the local culture as possible...
...network plans to present evidence to the Chinese government, which has been touting its crackdown on copyright violations that cost foreign firms up to $1 billion last year. "I find it amazing that a Foreign Ministry company would use a smuggled decoder to rip off these shows," says DAVID CANTALUPO, ESPN's general manager in China. The ministry's company insists it bought rights to the shows but won't say from whom. Who enjoys the pilfered programs? The apartments are stuffed with diplomats and journalists, including U.S. State Department officials and reporters from TIME. How long until the World...