Fortune | FORTUNE 06月17日 17:31
Cushman & Wakefield’s Michelle MacKay on the advantages of board-to-CEO leaders
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本文报道了Cushman & Wakefield的CEO Michelle MacKay的职业生涯转型,以及她如何从董事会席位重返公司领导岗位。文章探讨了MacKay在担任董事期间对公司和自身职业生涯的整体看法,以及她如何应对商业地产服务业面临的挑战,并带领公司实现增长。此外,文章还提到了特朗普对伊朗局势的表态、油价波动、市场动态等相关新闻。

💡MacKay在担任董事期间重新审视了自己的职业道路,这段经历对她来说至关重要。她认为这段时间让她拥有了更全面的视角。

🏢MacKay的背景在公司面临营收下降时极具吸引力,她拒绝了CFO的职位,选择了COO,并最终在2023年7月成为CEO。这反映了她对挑战的积极态度。

📈尽管商业地产服务业面临关税、地缘政治等问题,MacKay仍带领公司实现了增长。她认为,领导者在董事会服务一段时间后,可以带着新的视角和目标重返企业领导岗位。

🌍文章还提到了特朗普对伊朗局势的评论,油价的波动,以及市场动态,反映了商业环境的复杂性。

“Those three years that I spent in board seats, with a little more time for myself, were probably the most important years of my career journey, which is ironic, because I wasn’t working full time,” MacKay told Fortune in this week’s Leadership Next podcast. “I really hadn’t stepped back in a number of years and reconsidered my own path.”

Her background in finance and real estate were appealing at a time of declining revenues. When Cushman’s then-CEO John Forrester asked MacKay if she’d consider becoming CFO of the company, she said no, instead agreeing to become COO in 2020 with a clear path to becoming CEO in July of 2023. “It was a big challenge with a big brand and I had somebody who backed me from the onset. And I thought, ‘You know what? We got one version here, one life. I’m just going to go for it.’”

While tariffs, geopolitics and other issues continue to weigh on the global outlook for commercial real estate services, MacKay has led the firm to growth again. Board service gave her a holistic view of not only the company but also her career. With CEO turnover near record highs for much of the past year, more leaders may find a period of pause on boards inspires them to return to corporate leadership with fresh eyes and purpose. Said MacKay: “Can one be too engaged? I don’t think so.” You can listen to the podcast here on Apple or Spotify. More news below.

Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com

Top news

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Trump slams Macron

In a post early this morning, Trump said, “Publicity seeking President Emmanuel Macron, of France, mistakenly said that I left the G7 Summit, in Canada, to go back to D.C. to work on a ‘cease fire’ between Israel and Iran. Wrong! He has no idea why I am now on my way to Washington, but it certainly has nothing to do with a Cease Fire. Much bigger than that. Whether purposely or not, Emmanuel always gets it wrong. Stay Tuned!” Reality check: The White House has actually proposed peace talks with Iran and Trump left the G7 summit early to deal with the conflict, but nothing concrete has emerged yet.

Oil prices dip despite conflict

Crude oil prices saw moderate dips on Monday after rising last week following Israel’s attacks on Iran’s energy infrastructure. Fortune’s Energy Editor Jordan Blum explains why the ongoing conflict has had a subdued effect on energy prices in the U.S.

Exclusive: Congressman Tim Moore actively traded around Liberation Day

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Experts think Trump phone will likely be made in China

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Fortune Southeast Asia 500 2025

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Imports fall at Port of L.A.

The Port of Los Angeles saw imports fall nearly 20% in May compared to April’s numbers as tariffs make shipping products to the U.S. more expensive. The port’s executive director says these import declines could mean higher prices and emptier shelves for consumers towards the end of the year.

The markets

    S&P 500 futures were off 0.5% this morning after the Stoxx Europe 600 sunk 0.6% in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.59%. South Korea’s Kospi was flat. China’s SSE Composite was also flat. The Nasdaq Composite rose 1.5% yesterday propelled by various tech stocks: Coinbase was up 7.7%, Reddit was up 6.8%, and Palantir was up nearly 3%. The S&P 500 closed up 0.94% yesterday.

From the analysts

    Convera on the weakening dollar: “Surging oil prices—up as much as 12% on Friday amid escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East—have further exposed the dollar’s fading safe-haven appeal. A clear divergence is taking shape: oil rallies, yet the dollar fails to follow. This underscores how sentiment toward the US economy is acting as a stronger drag than what has historically been a dollar-positive force—higher oil prices, especially in periods of geopolitical risk. The result? Renewed selling pressure as confidence in US assets continues to erode,” per Antonio Ruggiero.Macquarie on Iran and the oil market: “We expect oil prices to remain volatile with an upward trend for the next few weeks as both Iran and Israel maintain their military intensity. Regardless of military or diplomatic progress, we expect Brent to rally towards the low $80 level before hitting a plateau as the perceived risk of actual oil supply disruption becomes largely discounted. … the next price move will, in our view, be driven by what happens to Iranian oil export infrastructure. If it is damaged or destroyed, we believe oil will trend towards $100 due to the direct loss of Iranian exports and the risk premium associated with Iran's response,” per Vikas Dwivedi and team.Oxford Economics on business sentiment: “Businesses have become less pessimistic about the near-term outlook for the world economy, according to our latest Global Risk Survey. The large downgrade in growth expectations in the aftermath of April's 'liberation day' tariff announcements has now partially unwound. Respondents perceive a significant reduction in the probability of a severe deterioration in economic prospects. They see less than a 15% chance of a global recession this year, compared with more than 25% in April,” per Jamie Thompson.

Around the watercooler

Exclusive: Trump’s former commerce secretary says an over-confident White House may push trade allies like the EU too far by Eleanor Pringle

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Coinbase faces crypto backlash over sponsoring military parade in D.C. by Catherine McGrath

The CEOs of Starbucks and Chipotle hit the gym together each morning—they bounce ideas off each other at 5 a.m. between sets by Preston Fore

CEO Daily is compiled and edited by Joey Abrams and Jim Edwards.

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Michelle MacKay Cushman & Wakefield 职业转型 商业地产
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