
“Strategy is about making choices, trade-offs; it’s about deliberately choosing to be different.”
— Michael Porter
The world’s best CEOs didn’t win by optimizing the present.
They won by having the courage to kill a profitable past to fund an uncertain future.
What separates exceptional CEOs from merely successful ones isn’t charisma, IQ, or timing. It’s their ability to make asymmetric bets early, before the evidence is comfortable and while the old business is still throwing off cash.
The leaders in CEO Excellence faced radically different industries, geographies, and constraints, yet they kept arriving at the same hard conclusion: growth requires trade-offs, focus, and conviction.
Across technology, finance, healthcare, energy, and consumer brands, the pattern repeats. Strategy wasn’t about protecting what worked.
It was about deliberately dismantling it to create what’s next.
Key Takeaways
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Great CEOs make the future expensive on purpose
They reallocate capital, talent, and attention away from today’s profit pools before decline forces their hand.
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Culture is a strategic lever, not a value statement
From Microsoft to Netflix to LEGO, behavior change preceded business model change.
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Focus beats optionality
The best leaders said “no” far more aggressively than their peers—and stuck to it.
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Transformation is an operating system, not a program
These CEOs embedded new decision rules, metrics, and forums—not slogans.
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Long-term advantage is built in moments of discomfort
The hardest moves were made when the old model still looked “good enough.”
Overview Summary
This is not a list of inspirational stories or personality traits. It’s a pattern library drawn from 67 CEOs who led through inflection points—cloud, AI, fintech, renewables, platform shifts, globalization, and regulation.
Across industries, the same strategic throughline emerges: durable leadership means reallocating resources ahead of certainty, redesigning the organization to match the future, and holding the line when results lag intent.
Whether scaling a digital platform, modernizing a bank, pivoting an energy portfolio, or rebuilding a legacy brand, these leaders treated strategy as a living system—one that required continuous pruning, renewal, and reinforcement.
67 of the World’s Best CEOs from CEO Excellence
In the book CEO Excellence, McKinsey studied 67 CEOs who consistently outperformed peers over long time horizons.
The leaders listed below represent that group—chosen not for fame, but for the difficult, often unpopular decisions they made to reposition their companies for the future.
- Ajay Banga – Mastercard
- Alain Bejjani – Majid Al Futtaim
- Aliko Dangote – Dangote Group
- Andrew Wilson – Electronic Arts
- Ana Botín – Grupo Santander
- Bill George – Medtronic
- Brad D. Smith – Intuit
- David Thodey – Telstra
- Dick Boer – Ahold Delhaize
- Doug Baker Jr. – Ecolab
- Ed Breen – Tyco International
- Feike Sijbesma – DSM
- Flemming Ørnskov – Galderma
- Frank Blake – Home Depot
- Francesco Starace – Enel
- Gail Kelly – Westpac
- Gil Shwed – Checkpoint Software
- Greg Case – Aon
- Henrik Poulsen – Ørsted
- Herbert Hainer – Adidas
- Hubert Joly – Best Buy
- Ivan Menezes – Diageo
- Jacques Aschenbroich – Valeo
- Jamie Dimon – JPMorgan Chase
- James Miwangi – Equity Group
- Johan Molin – Assa Abloy
- Johan Thijs – KBC
- Jim Owens – Caterpillar
- Jørgen Vig Knudstorp – LEGO
- Kan Trakulhoon – Siam Cement Group
- V. Kamath – ICICI Bank
- Kasper Rørsted – Adidas
- Kazuo Hirai – Sony
- Ken Chenault – American Express
- Ken Powell – General Mills
- Larry Culp – Danaher / General Electric
- Lars Rebien Sørensen – Novo Nordisk
- Lilach Asher‑Topilsky – Israel Discount Bank
- Lip-Bu Tan – Cadence Design Systems
- Lynn Good – Duke Energy
- Marc Casper – Thermo Fisher Scientific
- Marillyn Hewson – Lockheed Martin
- Marjorie Yang – Esquel
- Masahiko Uotani – Shiseido
- Maurice Lévy – Publicis
- Mary Barra – General Motors
- Matti Lievonen – Neste
- Michael Fisher – Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
- Mitchell Elegbe – Interswitch
- Mike Mahoney – Boston Scientific
- Nancy McKinstry – Wolters Kluwer
- Oliver Bäte – Allianz
- Patrick Pouyanné – Total
- Peter Brabeck‑Letmathe – Nestlé
- Peter Voser – Shell
- Piyush Gupta – DBS
- Reed Hastings – Netflix
- Richard Davis – U.S. Bankcorp
- Roberto Setúbal – Itaú Unibanco
- Rodney O’Neal – Delphi
- Roger Ferguson – TIAA
- Ronnie Leten – Atlas Copco
- Sandy Cutler – Eaton Corporation
- Satya Nadella – Microsoft
- Shantanu Narayen – Adobe
- Sundar Pichai – Alphabet / Google
- Toby Cosgrove – Cleveland Clinic
67 of the World’s Best CEOs Grouped by Industry
These leaders came from very different worlds—software, banking, healthcare, energy, manufacturing.
They faced different regulators, customers, technologies, and cycles.
But when you look past the surface, the same leadership moment shows up again and again.
Technology, Software & Digital Platforms
The thread: Every one of these leaders had to kill a profitable past to fund an uncertain future.
- Satya Nadella – Microsoft — Rewired the culture from “know-it-all” to “learn-it-all” while shifting the profit engine to cloud.
- Sundar Pichai – Alphabet/Google — Scaled a founder-centric company by institutionalizing disciplined product councils and AI bets.
- Shantanu Narayen – Adobe — Pulled off the high-stakes leap from boxed software to subscriptions without wrecking margins.
- Reed Hastings – Netflix — Used radical transparency and “keeper tests” to build an unmatched high-autonomy culture.
- Gil Shwed – Check Point Software — Built a cybersecurity compounder through relentless product focus and quiet, disciplined M&A.
- Brad D. Smith – Intuit — Made “design for delight” a real operating system, not a poster on the wall.
- Lip-Bu Tan – Cadence Design Systems — Rescued Cadence by narrowing to the most mission-critical chip-design customers and winning them deeply.
- Kazuo Hirai – Sony — Orchestrated Sony’s turnaround by killing pet projects and betting on a few profitable cores.
- Andrew Wilson – Electronic Arts — Led EA’s shift from boxed games to live services and data-driven franchise management.
Financial Services, Banking & Payments
The thread: From fortress balance sheets to fintech plays — these leaders proved “boring” industries can reinvent themselves.
- Jamie Dimon – JPMorgan Chase — Built the “fortress balance sheet” and a bench so deep the firm can succession-plan at every layer.
- Ajay Banga – Mastercard — Turned Mastercard from a plastic card brand into a rails-and-data network.
- Ana Botín – Grupo Santander — Balanced family control, activists, and regulators while digitizing a 19th-century bank.
- Piyush Gupta – DBS — Ran DBS like a tech company with a banking license, wiring the org around journeys and APIs.
- K.V. Kamath – ICICI Bank — Used disciplined project finance to put ICICI at the center of India’s infrastructure build-out.
- James Miwangi – Equity Group — Proved you can build a high-growth bank on financial inclusion long before it was a buzzword.
- Mitchell Elegbe – Interswitch — Built the invisible plumbing behind Nigeria’s digital payments ecosystem.
- Gail Kelly – Westpac — Led through post-crisis regulatory shifts without losing growth or reputation.
- Johan Thijs – KBC — Made KBC a quiet compounder through boringly excellent bank-insurance execution.
- Lilach Asher-Topilsky – Israel Discount Bank — Cleaned up a messy balance sheet while pushing into the digital age.
- Richard Davis – U.S. Bancorp — Hard-wired community orientation into core strategy, not just the CSR deck.
Insurance, Risk & Professional Services
The thread: These leaders turned fragmented advisory businesses into integrated solution platforms.
- Oliver Bäte – Allianz — Tightened the company around capital discipline and risk-based pricing at massive scale.
- Greg Case – Aon — Integrated silos so clients bought multi-line solutions, not one-off insurance products.
- Roger Ferguson – TIAA — Modernized TIAA while staying true to its long-term, mission-driven roots.
Healthcare & Life Sciences
The thread: Mission-driven didn’t mean margin-soft — these CEOs built compounding machines around patient outcomes.
- Bill George – Medtronic — Scaled Medtronic while turning “authentic leadership” into a widely studied operating philosophy.
- Mike Mahoney – Boston Scientific — Took the company from litigation overhang to growth story via focused innovation bets.
- Toby Cosgrove – Cleveland Clinic — Designed a physician-led system-of-systems rather than a loose hospital network.
- Michael Fisher – Cincinnati Children’s Hospital — Built a research-plus-care flywheel for pediatric medicine.
- Marc Casper – Thermo Fisher Scientific — Built life-science infrastructure by being the steady “picks and shovels” player.
- Lars Rebien Sørensen – Novo Nordisk — Proved a diabetes-focused pharma could be both mission-driven and a compounding machine.
- Flemming Ørnskov – Galderma — Repositioned specialty pharma around rare-disease focus and disciplined product prioritization.
Energy, Utilities & Renewables
The thread: The boldest strategic pivots on this list happened here — leaders who bet the company on a different energy future.
- Henrik Poulsen – Ørsted — Executed the audacious pivot from fossil fuels to offshore wind years before the herd.
- Francesco Starace – Enel — Reframed a legacy utility as a renewables and grid-innovation platform.
- Lynn Good – Duke Energy — Navigated coal retirements, regulatory trade-offs, and the renewables pivot.
- Matti Lievonen – Neste — Repositioned a refiner as a renewable-fuels pioneer via technology and policy bets.
- Peter Voser – Shell — Reset Shell’s trajectory through portfolio pruning and stricter capital discipline.
- Patrick Pouyanné – Total — Balanced the hydrocarbon cash engine with accelerating bets on renewables and LNG.
Industrials, Manufacturing & Capital Goods
The thread: Cycles, complexity, and commoditization — these leaders won by building operating systems, not just products.
- Larry Culp – Danaher / GE — Used the Danaher playbook to make lean and daily management the heartbeat of GE.
- Sandy Cutler – Eaton — Re-architected the portfolio toward higher-value, less cyclical businesses via disciplined capital bets.
- Jim Owens – Caterpillar — Guided through cycles by treating downturns as capacity-building moments.
- Ronnie Leten – Atlas Copco — Ran on decentralization and ROCE, letting small units stay entrepreneurial.
- Rodney O’Neal – Delphi — Turned a near-bankrupt company into a credible tech supplier through ruthless safety and engineering focus.
- Jacques Aschenbroich – Valeo — Positioned Valeo as a key systems supplier for the software-defined car.
- Johan Molin – ASSA ABLOY — Used disciplined bolt-on M&A to build the global access-solutions leader.
- Kan Trakulhoon – Siam Cement Group — Simplified conglomerate sprawl into a coherent strategic architecture.
Consumer Goods, Retail & Brands
The thread: In a world of fickle consumers, these leaders built enduring brand architectures and cultural staying power.
- Mary Barra – General Motors — Fought legacy politics while committing billions to an EV, software, and services future.
- Hubert Joly – Best Buy — Showed a turnaround could be people-first, using employees and vendors as the strategy.
- Jørgen Vig Knudstorp – LEGO — Dragged LEGO back to basics by killing distractions and doubling down on the brick.
- Herbert Hainer – Adidas — Blended performance credibility with lifestyle appeal to create a global challenger.
- Kasper Rørsted – Adidas — Pushed toward sharper focus and margin discipline in a fashion-driven category.
- Ivan Menezes – Diageo — Turned Diageo into an emerging-market growth engine while stewarding heritage brands.
- Ken Powell – General Mills — Rotated portfolio and brands rather than chasing fads one at a time.
- Masahiko Uotani – Shiseido — Revitalized a heritage beauty brand by blending Japanese craft with global ambition.
- Peter Brabeck-Letmathe – Nestlé — Shifted Nestlé toward nutrition and health, redefining what a food company could be.
Apparel & Textiles
→ Folded into Consumer for cleaner grouping:
- Marjorie Yang – Esquel — Escaped the apparel “race to the bottom” by owning quality and upstream relationships at scale.
Telecom & Information Services
The thread: Commodity pipes, premium execution.
- David Thodey – Telstra — Forced Telstra to obsess over NPS and digital self-service in what behaved like a utility market.
- Nancy McKinstry – Wolters Kluwer — Quietly transformed a print publisher into an expert software and data provider.
Diversified Conglomerates & Holding Groups
The thread: When you can do anything, the hardest leadership move is deciding what NOT to do.
- Aliko Dangote – Dangote Group — Built an African industrial empire by vertically integrating from cement to refineries.
- Alain Bejjani – Majid Al Futtaim — Built a diversified consumer ecosystem across the Middle East.
- Roberto Setúbal – Itaú Unibanco — Institutionalized performance culture across generations of family leadership.
- Ed Breen – Tyco International — Rebuilt trust and value after scandal through disciplined breakup and portfolio clarity.
Chemicals, Nutrition & Specialty Materials
The thread: Reinvention from the molecule up.
- Feike Sijbesma – DSM — Proved a chemical company could be nutrition- and sustainability-led.
- Doug Baker Jr. – Ecolab — Embedded water, hygiene, and sustainability as core value drivers, not side projects.
Advertising & Marketing Services
- Maurice Lévy – Publicis — Bet early and hard on digital, dragging Publicis into the internet and platform era.
Aerospace & Defense
- Marillyn Hewson – Lockheed Martin — Led through geopolitical complexity while driving operational discipline and innovation at scale.
Final Thoughts
The defining job of a CEO isn’t to preserve success.
It’s to decide what must be let go—before circumstances decide for you.
In an AI-accelerated world, the cost of waiting has never been higher. The leaders who win next won’t have better forecasts—they’ll have better decision systems.
Get the Book

These are the CEO patterns I use inside my Strategic Leader System to help executives think bigger, decide faster, and lead smarter in the AI era.
This book is where it starts.
CEO Excellence distills what consistently separates the best CEOs from the rest—based on rigorous research and interviews with 67 of the world’s top-performing leaders.
If you lead people and are accountable for the future, this is essential reading.
Get CEO Excellence on Amazon
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