Czech inadequacy
What foreign investors want in a Czech country manager, a
headhunter said recently, is a good-looking guy or gal who
speaks good English and knows how to follow instructions. What
foreign owners don't want, the headhunter said, are people who
will have too many ideas of their own and cause resistance. Petr
aluda filled the bill at AXA, where he spent 11 years. He was
earning Kč 1m a month, he told HN, but had almost no ability to
influence anything, because most decisions were made at
headquarters. Becoming CEO at a market leader like Czech
Railways gives you the chance to make a difference and satisfy
your ego, he said. But the inferiority complex remains, LN
concluded after meeting with him this week. The Evian water he
drinks is a reflection of the complexes suffered by a large part
of the Czech elite, LN said. Yes, but aren't the foreign owners
partly to blame, by overpaying such managers and giving them
too little authority? As the Jesuits say, "Give me a child for its
first seven years, and I'll give you the man."
[Czech Republic Lidové noviny České dráhy insurance]
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