GM CEO Mary Barra and former IBM CEO Ginni Rometty ... And then no one knows." Barra advised young women in the workplace to "have a point of view. And it's okay if it isn't what the group decides ...
Reports are coming in that Mary Barra, the first female leader of a major automaker, will make $14.4 million this year, some $10 million more than previously reported and over $3 million more than ...
Sometimes you need to move into a different role, but it can be a building block for your career. Barra joined General Motors when she was 18 and has been its CEO since 2014. Back to Firsts ...
Barra dropped a few places, from 27th in 2012 to 29th in 2013, although she is the highest ranking woman in the auto industry to make Fortune's list. The 51-year-old exec continues to pick up ...
I write about the auto industry and its impact on almost everything. General Motors Co. CEO Mary Barra, nearly a decade on the job, on Monday reflected on various challenges this year. GM absorbed ...
GM's CEO Mary Barra is leading the 108 year old car company ... like the elderly or young children, to be able to travel on their own, Barra said. How the experience will change once we are ...
WSJ's Joanna Stern "bumps" into General Motors CEO Mary Barra in the WSJ elevator and asks about self-driving cars, NAFTA and how GM is diversifying its workforce. Photo: Jeff Bush/The Wall Street ...
General Motors CEO Mary Barra has said there are so many companies trying to sell electric vehicles in China right now that ...
Barra became the auto industry's first female CEO in January and promptly faced GM's largest vehicle recall ever (29 million so far) from a faulty ignition switch linked to at least 13 deaths ...
In her 10th year on the job, Mary Barra returns to the top of the MPW list. The CEO of General Motors has led the company to its strongest financial position in decades, reforming its culture and ...
It's a simple three-part question, but the answer ends up revealing a lot. GM’s Mary Barra on 4 trends that will shape the future of transportation General Motors is bulking up on software and ...
The challenges they face are anything but new. Mary Barra, the first-ever female CEO of a major global automaker, has boldly accepted responsibility for an ignition defect that resulted in 12 deaths.