The thing about being fashionably late is you have to be fashionable about it. Meyer apparently disclosed to someone that she was late because she had "fallen asleep." She wasn't late because she had, say, decided to take an impromptu meeting with some power player, something you could plausibly write off as benefitting the company. And ultimately, that's what this piece was about -- an executive's performance as an executive:
>"If it were an investor meeting, a board meeting or a potential acquisition, I am sure she or someone from her team would have woken her up,” said one top executive in attendance.
> “It is another instance where she demonstrated that she doesn’t understand the value of clients, ad revenue or agencies,” the person added"
I haven't personally noticed any articles about Larry Page being late to meetings. Have you? Do you think it's more likely that he is not late and never suffers jet lag, or that it's not reported when he is?
In Meyer's case it seems to be part of a pattern. Also, it's a bit notable because she recently fired Yahoo's CMO and took on his portfolio, but has missed several face-to-faces with CEOs of major advertisers. I don't think it's a gender issue at all.
If it was a CEO of a large company in major need of ad money, and had blown a meeting with ad executives, yes, you'd very much see a headline about it.
Actually, one of the oldest lores of IT is the famous story of a male executive (Gary Kildall of Digital Research) failing to appear on a meeting with IBM executives who would have made his company the supplier of the OS for the IBM PC.
Plus, it's not like tons of profile pieces on Meyer, epspecially on her Google days, weren't written precicely because she is a woman in tech.
A smaller industry, to be sure, but an industry (and a fairly important one) - albeit entirely B2B. DEC was founded in 1957 (PDP-1 in 1959, PDP-11 in 1970), and of course IBM was founded in 1911 from three companies each of which made things that were arguably "information technology" although I've no trouble with drawing the line somewhere substantially later than that.
Seems like a normal case of jet lag. 6000 miles east, +9 hour time difference between San Francisco and Cannes. When the sleep wall hits, it hits hard.
Dude, fuck Mondelez. Me and others at the company I worked for at the time won their "hackathon" (against Salesforce and Google) which was supposed to turn into additional contract work, but they waffled for a while and then ditched us. Yahoo probably wouldn't have gotten anything out of them anyways.
Seems like at pattern for Mayer. And seems to be a pattern with some powerful people (ex. Bill Clonton is regularly described as "always late") - I guess because they can get away with it so often it becomes a habit.
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[ 5.5 ms ] story [ 108 ms ] threadRT @cjc "Male Executive Late to Meeting" -- headline you'd never see
For men: being late is a status symbol
For women: OMG lets gossip about her
Really? For who exactly is being late a "status symbol"?
Maybe for someone who doesn't need the deals and everybody else is dependent upon him.
But even those kind of people are frequenty marked as "arseholes" if they are constantly and arrogantly late.
It only works if you get away with it, of course.
It's disrespectful in any event.
>"If it were an investor meeting, a board meeting or a potential acquisition, I am sure she or someone from her team would have woken her up,” said one top executive in attendance.
> “It is another instance where she demonstrated that she doesn’t understand the value of clients, ad revenue or agencies,” the person added"
Actually, one of the oldest lores of IT is the famous story of a male executive (Gary Kildall of Digital Research) failing to appear on a meeting with IBM executives who would have made his company the supplier of the OS for the IBM PC.
Plus, it's not like tons of profile pieces on Meyer, epspecially on her Google days, weren't written precicely because she is a woman in tech.
I don't work nearly that much and I dozed off in my coding chair three times today ...
http://www.businessinsider.com/marissa-mayer-has-a-bad-habit...