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Two
young Indian CEOs make $15.7 mn between them
New York, August 21, 2008 (IANS)
Two
young corporate leaders of Indian origin have been ranked by Forbes
magazine among 15 highest-paid chief executives officers in the
US below the age of 45, making a cool $15.7 million per annum between
them, not counting the millions more in stock options. Meet Shantanu
Narayen, 44, the chief executive of Adobe Systems since December
2007, and Francisco D'Souza, 39, chief executive of Cognizant Technology
since January last year.
"Young
chief executives are becoming an endangered species," Forbes
said in the article dedicated to America's top-paid young chief
executive officers in its latest issue. "Since the height of
tech boom in 2000, the number of CEOs aged 45 or younger at the
helm of the 500 largest publicly-traded US companies has dropped
more than half to 28 from 60, and just three haven't yet reached
their 40th birthdays."
Quoting
compensation experts, the magazine said proven leadership experience
is ultimately what has lead to the mega bucks. "The guys on
this list are certainly getting their shot. Better yet, they're
getting paid."
Hyderabad-born
Narayen makes $12 million per annum and ranks fifth on the list.
Apart from the top-notch salary, he also has stock options that
are worth $26.3 million at current rates. Armed with a bachelor's
degree in electronics engineering from the Osmania University in
Hyderabad, he started his career with Apple Inc and then served
Silicon Graphics.
Before
joining Adobe in 1998, he was co-founder of Pictra Inc, an early
pioneer of digital photo sharing over the Internet. In 2005, he
led the $3.4 billion acquisition of Macromedia, to expand Adobe's
software platform and solutions. Narayan also has a master's degree
in computer sciences from the Bowling Green State University and
a master's degree in business administration from the Haas School
of Business, Berkeley.
A son
of an Indian diplomat, D'Souza makes $3.7 million per month and
ranks 15th on the Forbes list. He also has stock options worth $23.82
million at current rates. D'Souza was born in Nairobi and holds
a bachelor of business administration degree from the University
of East Asia in Hong Kong and a master's in the same stream from
Carnegie-Mellon University. He won the Economic Times Entrepreneur
Award in 2005 and was a finalist at the Ernst and Young Entrepreneur
of the Year award in 2002.
Earlier
in his career, D'Souza spent four years at various divisions of
The Dun and Bradstreet Corp, holding key positions in marketing,
strategic planning, and new business development in Germany, the
US and India.
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