PepsiCo
CEO Indra Nooyi and ICICI Bank Managing Director Chanda Kochhar
are among
Fortune magazine’s list of 50 most powerful women in business who are
“taking on the world” by pushing into new territories and inspiring women in
their home countries. The Fortune list of ’50 most powerful women in
business: Global edition’ has been topped by General Motors CEO Mary Barra,
the first woman to run a global automaker.“By pushing into new territories and
inspiring women in their home countries, these globetrotters are, quite
literally, taking on the world,” Fortune said of the ladies on the list.
An
electrical engineer who has spent her entire career at GM, Barra oversees more
than 212,000 employees in 396 GM facilities on six continents. Nooyi, who
ranks third on the list and Kochhar on the 18th spot are the only two
Indian women on the list.Fortune said Nooyi, 58, more than doubled sales for
Pepsi from outside the US in her seven years running PepsiCo.
International markets now
make up about half of the company’s $65.5 billion in revenue. “Indian-born
Nooyi has made sure her product pipeline reflects her consumer base: Since
2012, “innovation centers” have popped up in Shanghai, Hamburg, and Monterrey,
Mexico,” it said. Kochchar, 52, leads India’s second-largest bank, a
sprawling organization with $124 billion in assets, $1.5 billion in profit, and
3,588 branches. Though the bulk of ICICI’s business is done in India and with
companies operating there, the bank is in 19 countries and does brisk
business transferring money from expats to families back in India, it said.
The
list includes IBM Chairman, CEO, President Ginni Rometty on the 2nd spot, energy
corporation Petrobras CEO Maria das Gracas Silva Foster on the 4th spot,
Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg (11), Yahoo President and CEO Marissa Mayer (14)
and Google’s Senior Vice President for Ads and Commerce Susan Wojcicki (20).