Sentences with phrase «boardroom battle»

"Boardroom battle" refers to a situation where there is a disagreement or conflict among the members of a company's board of directors. It is a metaphorical term used to describe intense debates, arguments, or power struggles that occur during important decision-making meetings. Full definition
«If you're the CEO of a company then, you have to keep that stock up,» said hedge fund manager Jeff Gramm, author of a new book on boardroom battles called «Dear Chairman.»
This is shaping up to be one of the nastier boardroom battles in recent Canadian history.
The deal comes months after an activist investor won seats on the restaurant's board following a bitter boardroom battle.
You're either going to create some severe boardroom battles, or you're going to be executing the previous CEO's strategy.»
He replaces Xavier Rolet who stood down as LSE chief in LSE last year following a public boardroom battle.
The issue of Uber's valuation is hardly academic amid a boardroom battle over control of the company.
Beyond the boardroom battle, Khosrowshahi faces a long list of challenges at Uber.
The increasingly competitive global landscape comes at a time when Uber is hobbled by an empty C - Suite, boardroom battles and concerns about steep financial losses.
The Gunners missed out on a spot in Europe's premier competition for the first time in 21 years and it couldn't have come at a worse time for them, the club has lost its stability with the tight lipped Frenchman Arsene Wenger refusing to give anything away about his future and a boardroom battle for control between Silent Stan Kroenke and Alisher Usmanov showing no signs of ending the club may struggle to step back up.
That's where Lindholm really excels as a story - teller: just as A Hijacking spent as much time focusing on the boardroom battles to free the captured vessel as the lives on board, A War devotes half of its runtime to studying the impact of Claus» call.
My new shirt feels incredibly soft, but fits as if it's been moulded to my body — ready to make me look good in a boardroom battle or over a three - martini lunch afterwards.
I've thought about this problem before, but always thought it was more of a curiosity until I read this on page 66 of Jeff Gramm's very good book, Dear Chairman: Boardroom Battles and the Rise of Shareholder Activism.
His recently published book, Dear Chairman: Boardroom Battles and the Rise of Shareholder Activism, was named one of the best books of 2016 by the Financial Times.
Dear Chairman: Boardroom Battles and the Rise of Shareholder Activism Jeff Gramm HarperBusiness, 2016
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