Nobuyuki Idei
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Nobuyuki Idei (出井伸之, Idei Nobuyuki; born November 22, 1937) was a former Chairman and Group Chief Executive Officer of Sony Corporation until the 7th March 2005. He is also a director of General Motors, Baidu and Nestlé. BusinessWeek magazine nominated him as one of the "Worst Managers of 2005" due to the losses at Sony during his tenure.
After a stroke sidelined former chairman Akio Morita, Sony CEO and new chairman Norio Ohga selected Idei to be the next president, a choice that raised eyebrows at Sony. His sweeping reorganizations of the company included trimming the board of directors from 38 members dominated by company management to 10 with a substantial presence of outsiders. Already perceived as the company's driving force, Idei was formally named co-CEO in 1998 and sole CEO in 1999. In 2000, while Ohga remained Chairman of the Board, Idei became Executive Chairman and Kunitake Ando became president.
In 2003, on Ohga's retirement, Idei became the sole Chairman, and the title of Chief Executive Officer was altered to Group Chief Executive Officer.
On March 7, 2005 it was announced that Idei would be succeeded on June 22 by Sir Howard Stringer, 63, a Welsh national by birth having a dual passports for UK and USA.[1]
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Preceded by Norio Ohga |
President of Sony Corporation 1989-2000 |
Succeeded by Kunitake Ando |
Preceded by Norio Ohga |
CEO of Sony Corporation 1999-2005 |
Succeeded by Sir Howard Stringer |
Preceded by Norio Ohga |
Chairman of the Board of Sony Corporation 2003-2005 |
Succeeded by Sir Howard Stringer |
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