Vancouver Sun

‘MY JOB IS IN FACT JUST BEGINNING’: PEPSI CEO

Soda giant’s outgoing leader vows to help women break glass ceiling

- CRAIG GIAMMONA AND JACQUELINE SIMMONS

NEW YORK Indra Nooyi is stepping down as chief executive officer of food and beverage giant PepsiCo Inc., handing the reins to a top lieutenant in a transition that will draw attention to the dearth of prominent female CEOs in corporate America.

Nooyi, 62, will leave the role in October and remain chairman until early 2019.

Ramon Laguarta, 54, who has been a candidate to take over since a promotion last year to president, will be just the sixth CEO in the 53year history of the company.

Nooyi, who is from India, is the first foreign-born CEO of PepsiCo and the first woman to lead the chips-and-soda behemoth, whose revenue topped $63 billion last year. Her departure thins the ranks of female CEOs running S&P 500 companies and comes at a time that PepsiCo’s North American beverage unit is stagnating amid a general decline in soda consumptio­n. In 24 years at PepsiCo, including 12 as chief executive, she has helped the Frito-Lay unit grow in a challengin­g industry and added healthier drinks and snacks to a portfolio that includes Cheetos and Mountain Dew.

“I’ve had a wonderful time being CEO, but at some point you sit back and say, look, it’s a responsibl­e move to effect an orderly transition and to have somebody else take over the leadership of this company,” she said in an interview. “Being a CEO requires strong legs and I feel like I ran two legs of a relay race and I want somebody else with nice strong legs and sharp eyes to come and lead this company.”

A 22-year PepsiCo veteran, Laguarta ran the Europe sub- Saharan Africa division before becoming president last year, overseeing global operations, strategy, public policy and government affairs. A Barcelona native, he worked at lollipop maker Chupa Chups before joining PepsiCo.

Nooyi attended graduate school at Yale University and joined Purchase, New York-based PepsiCo in 1994 as head of corporate strategy, rising to the CEO job in 2006. At the time only a handful of women ran major U.S. companies.

Nooyi faced down activist investor Nelson Peltz, repelling a bid to break up the company, and has guided PepsiCo through a tricky stretch as shifts in how U.S. consumers eat and shop have bedevilled the world’s largest food and beverage companies. Nooyi also improved internatio­nal growth during her tenure, particular­ly in developing markets.

“Indra’s legacy is that she’s figured out in a difficult environmen­t that she could run a great companyand drive great results and do good at the same time, while having long-lasting impact as a leader and global icon,” said Blair Effron, co-founder of Centerview Partners, an investment bank and advisory firm that’s worked with a range of consumer giants including PepsiCo.

As she ponders her next chapter, Nooyi said she’ll possibly take a vacation, in addition to watching the New York Yankees baseball team, and, she quipped, “listen to some music, take a walk in the woods.”

She hasn’t thought through potential next steps, but at a time when global progress on promoting more women to CEO positions appears to have stalled, she plans to help develop more talent to ensure that women are represente­d in the top ranks of corporate America.

“I think people like me, after we leave privileged CEO jobs, I don’t think we can go silent,” she said. “We have to keep fighting the good fight to develop women, to mentor them, to support them, so that we can get more highly qualified women — and there’s plenty of them — into the boardroom, into C suites and into the ultimate CEO job. My job is in fact just beginning once I leave PepsiCo because I can do things now that I was constraine­d to do when I was CEO of the company.”

The departure of Nooyi drops the number of women CEOs in the S&P 500 to 23, according to Bloomberg ’s analysis of data compiled by researcher Catalyst, which advocates for more women in executive positions. The list was last updated July 13.

Kathy Warden is scheduled to become CEO of Northrop Grumman Corp. in January.

The packaged food industry in particular has witnessed several key female executive exits in the past year. Campbell Soup Co. CEO Denise Morrison abruptly departed in May, while former Mondelez Internatio­nal Inc. CEO Irene Rosenfeld handed over the reins of the Oreo maker in November.

Like many CEOs in a divisive political era, Nooyi has found herself a part of political discussion­s. She described herself at a conference as a supporter of Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election but congratula­ted Donald Trump for his victory and was part of his short-lived business advisory council.

During an era when a businessma­n occupies the White House and corporate leaders including Mark Cuban and Howard Schultz are mentioned as potential presidenti­al candidates, Nooyi said she doesn’t see a future for herself in politics.

“I think there are business leaders who like politics and there are business leaders who’d be lousy at politics,” she said. “I happen to be in the second group, and so I just want to make sure that whatever I can do behind the scenes to help any cause, I will — that makes sense for me. But politics no, not for me.”

Nooyi is leaving the top job at PepsiCo as overall soda consumptio­n has dropped to its lowest level in more than 30 years as consumers try to avoid sugary drinks. That’s led PepsiCo and competitor­s to diversify into new products perceived as healthier, and to market zero-sugar versions of their soft drinks and retool their diet beverages.

But there have been stumbles. A high-profile bid in 2015 to reformulat­e Diet Pepsi led to lower sales, and the company revived its old formula a year later. Nooyi told investors last month that Diet Pepsi is performing well again, but Coca-Cola Co. has won more attention this year for its revitaliza­tion of Diet Coke.

A ballyhooed 2012 joint venture with German dairy giant Theo Muller to sell yogurt in North America fizzled four years later due to slow sales. Chobani said in 2016 that PepsiCo had tried to take a major stake in the Greekyogur­t maker, though PepsiCo never confirmed the discussion­s. The company pushed into the dairy case with the 2011 purchase of a majority stake in Wimm-BillDann Foods OJSC, Russia’s leading branded food-and-beverage company.

The company ’s Frito-Lay unit remains a snacking powerhouse with brands like Tostitos, Doritos and Lay’s chips dominating grocerysto­re shelves. Big Food companies have lost billions in revenue in recent years as consumers gravitate to more natural products made by smaller upstarts. But Frito-Lay, while not immune to the shifts, has defended its turf, controllin­g about two-thirds of the U.S. saltysnack market.

Nooyi has also worked to appeal to modern snackers. Frito-Lay has versions of 11 core chip brands without artificial ingredient­s, aiming to break out of the traditiona­l snack aisle and get into organic grocery stores. Products such as Sabra hummus and guacamole, Naked cold-press juices and Lipton Pure Leaf tea have bolstered results.

During Nooyi’s time leading the company, PepsiCo shares rose about 80 per cent, while rival CocaCola has more than doubled, as has the S&P 500.

PepsiCo shares rose as much as 1.5 per cent in New York on Monday to the highest intraday level since February.

Nooyi said under her tenure PepsiCo considered and passed on large transactio­ns that could have dramatical­ly altered the company. “Everybody says, ‘Hey, do a transforma­tive deal, it will put you in the neon lights ,’” she said .“The issue is that we’ ve got to derive value from large transforma­tive deals. And we didn’t find one that would create shareholde­r value.”

Now, Laguarta prepares to take the reins at a tricky time for the company, with pressure ramping up to ignite growth, particular­ly in the North American beverage unit.

“Ramon is the product of a responsibl­e developmen­t and succession plan,” Nooyi said. “He’s had a bird’s-eye view of the whole company and what kind of disruptive moves we would have to make, disruptive productivi­ty, to take us to this next era of growth for this company.”

I think people like me, after we leave privileged CEO jobs, I don’t think we can go silent. We have to keep fighting the good fight to develop women, to mentor them, to support them, so that we can get more highly qualified women—and there’s plenty of them — into the boardroom, into C suites and into the ultimate CEO job.

 ?? MICHAEL NAGLE/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Indra Nooyi is leaving her role as the first female and foreign-born CEO of food and beverage giant PepsiCo Inc., in October. Her departure drops the number of female CEOs in the S&P 500 to 23. Under her 12-year tenure, the firm’s shares rose about 80 per cent.
MICHAEL NAGLE/BLOOMBERG FILES Indra Nooyi is leaving her role as the first female and foreign-born CEO of food and beverage giant PepsiCo Inc., in October. Her departure drops the number of female CEOs in the S&P 500 to 23. Under her 12-year tenure, the firm’s shares rose about 80 per cent.

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