Comment by eiens
7 hours ago
Someone in power doesn’t get to choose - the board of directors do. Who’s job is to act in the best interest of shareholders.
Firms tend to follow peers in an industry - once one blinks the rest follow.
7 hours ago
Someone in power doesn’t get to choose - the board of directors do. Who’s job is to act in the best interest of shareholders.
Firms tend to follow peers in an industry - once one blinks the rest follow.
> Someone in power doesn’t get to choose - the board of directors do. Who’s job is to act in the best interest of shareholders.
Alas, shareholder value is a great ideal, but it tends to be honoured in practice rather less strictly.
As you can also see when sudden competition leads to rounds of efficiency improvements, cost cutting and product enhancements: even without competition, a penny saved is a penny earned for shareholders. But only when fierce competition threatens to put managers' jobs at risk, do they really kick into overdrive.
> Someone in power doesn’t get to choose - the board of directors do
Since the board of directors can decide to replace the CEO, it's not the CEO who holds the (ultimate) power, it's the board of directors.
The board of directors are also people in power - why not replace them with an LLM as well if it works so well for CEOs?