首页
登录
职称英语
•You will hear part of a conversation among an interviewer, John Chambers and Ca
•You will hear part of a conversation among an interviewer, John Chambers and Ca
游客
2025-06-03
28
管理
问题
•You will hear part of a conversation among an interviewer, John Chambers and Carly Fiorina, CEOs of two companies.
•For each question 23—30, mark one letter A, B or C for the correct answer.
•You will hear the recording twice. [br] Which is not the possible percent age of the e-mails and voice mails that are very supportive of the CEOs when the CEOs are meeting with very difficult problems?
M: (Interviewer): What happens to the CEOs who are praised as all-wise geniuses when the Dow and NASDAQ were rocketing upwards once the market turns the other way? What can a business leader do when his or her company still strong, still profitable gets caught in a sudden ominous climate change? Both our guests tonight will face those questions. OK, I’m wondering whether or not, either of you or both of you have the experience in recent days where the same people who regarded you as the absolute Sun King and Queen of the world are now looking at you at all differently, because they’ve seen the value of the shares go down? I mean, do people tend to blame the CEO in the same way that they may credit the CFA] when things go well?
M: (John Chambers): I’ll give you the tough questions, Curly, first. I’ll take the second shot at it.
F: (Curly Fiorina): Well, first of all, I remember, well, something that someone once said to me about the media. What they said was, "You’re never as good as they say you are and you’re never as bad as they say you are", and that% true. I think leadership takes, and now I’m quoting John. John says all the time and it’s true, "Leadership takes more than its fair share of the credit and more than its fair share of the blame, " but that is the price of leadership.
M: (John Chambers): I would agree and I often open up after somebody says some nice comments and introducing for a speech with exactly that comment, "you’re never as good as things are when things go well, nor as bad when you trip a little bit. ’ The press, it gees with the territory. I’ve been pleasantly surprised by both how our employee base and how our shareholders, even those who have lost a lot of money, probably about 95 to 98 percent of the e-mails and voice mails have been very supportive. Now they expect us to get it back up, but are very supportive of where we are.
M: (interviewer) .. But is it easier? Does it help in a way your individual company’s or yourselves that this—whatever we want to call it—down turn, Tsunami has hit so broadly?
F: (Carly Florins): Well, I think it certainly helps in the sense that what investors, what employees, what customers ought to be focused on in this time is: are the basic strategies changing? They shouldn’t be just because times get tough if they were the right strategies. Are the basic ways of operating changing? They shouldn’t be just because the times are getting tough. Of course you make different discretionary decisions, but the way you treat your employees—do you still treat them with respect and empathy in the tough times as well as the good times? So people ought to be looking for the patterns that endure. And I think that’s true of investors, the smart ones are trying to say, okay, it’s going to be crummy for a couple of quarters, but do I believe in the value this company represents? Do I believe in the employees and the management team that are trying to uncover that value?
M: (interviewer): Let me turn to something that Carly mentioned, then I’ll want to give you a chance. She talked about the fact that when she was named CEO at Hewlett Packard, she was very conscious of the import of her words. How conscious are you of the public persona you display?
M: (John Chambers): That has changed a lot in the last couple of years. But originally, CISCO was a company that sold a couple of technicians very deep in the bowels of the IT organization, and no one knew who we were, and neither myself nor my predecessor, now my chairman John Wooldridge cared. And so we had no personal needs to be known whatsoever. And that was fine as long as two technicians were making the decisions. But once everybody from the CISCO, the Chairman of the Beard of the company, the President were making the decisions on this, the image of the company and what i0 represented became very important to us. You can accomplish that through huge amount of advertising, which I’m not sure is real effective in many ways; or you can accomplish it in terms of the image of the company in different ways with the executive, all things being synonymous with what you’re trying to do with that image. And...
选项
A、70
B、96
C、97
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/4101810.html
相关试题推荐
•Youwillhearpartofaconversationamonganinterviewer,JohnChambersandCa
•Youwillhearpartofaconversationamonganinterviewer,JohnChambersandCa
•Youwillhearpartofaconversationamonganinterviewer,JohnChambersandCa
•Youwillhearpartofaconversationamonganinterviewer,JohnChambersandCa
•YouwillhearpartofaconversationbetweenaninterviewerandAndrewGrove,
•YouwillhearpartofaconversationbetweenaninterviewerandAndrewGrove,
•YouwillhearpartofaconversationbetweenaninterviewerandAndrewGrove,
•YouwillhearpartofaconversationbetweenaninterviewerandAndrewGrove,
•YouwillhearpartofaconversationbetweenaninterviewerandAndrewGrove,
•YouwillhearpartofaconversationbetweenaninterviewerandAndrewGrove,
随机试题
WhatisthemostimportantfactorforarockettoescapefromtheEarth?[br]As
TheRedistributionofHope"HOPE"isoneofthemost
健康管理最能够产生效果的项目,首属()健康管理。A.家庭内部 B.社区场地
过食肥甘厚味,易于()A.阻滞气机 B.损伤胃肠 C.化热生痰 D.
腹痛、腹泻、黏液脓血便,伴发热恶寒,最可能的诊断是A.细菌性痢疾 B.阿米巴痢
专项计划资产独立于( )的固有财产。 Ⅰ.原始权益人 Ⅱ.托管人 Ⅲ.其
某建筑为两层框架结构,设一层地下室,结构荷载均匀对称,采用筏板基础,筏板沿建筑物
下列关于与集团财务报表审计有关的概念的说法中,不正确的是()。A.所有组成部分
(2020年真题)根据税收征收管理法律制度的规定,申请人可以在知道税务机关作出具
某8X125MW燃煤机组设置有燃油系统,燃油系统及邻近区域电负荷如表1,所有电机
最新回复
(
0
)