Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Former American Express"


7 mentions found


Tony West, Harris' brother-in-law and an Uber executive, doesn't plan on serving in her cabinet. Other private sector stars are in the running for key positions like Treasury secretary. Tony West, Harris' brother-in-law and a top executive at Uber, has been instrumental in cementing the vice president's relationship with corporate America. Sources told Semafor he's a leading candidate for Treasury secretary, among other positions. Related storiesBut Chenault isn't a shoo-in — leaders on and off Wall Street are also jockeying for the coveted position.
Persons: Tony West, Harris, , Kamala Harris, Uber, Ken Chenault, Chenault, Semafor he's, Berkshire Hathaway, Wally Adeyemo, Gina Raimondo, Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase, Blair Effron, Charles Phillips, Brad Smith, Lina Khan, Gary Gensler, Mark Cuban Organizations: Service, White, Uber, America, Wall Street Journal, Former American Express, Democratic, Democratic National Convention, American Express, Facebook, IBM, Procter, Gamble, Treasury, Commerce, JPMorgan, CNBC, Microsoft, Federal Trade Commission, Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC Locations: Airbnb, Berkshire
Democratic presidential nominee and U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris speaks onstage during a campaign event, in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., September 29, 2024. Business Leaders for Harris went live with a website early Friday that features online testimonials, both from small business owners and hugely successful entrepreneurs. We need someone who will bring us hope in a very tangible way and that is Kamala Harris," Chenault says in his testimonial. Business Leaders for Harris is a project of the Republican Accountability PAC, a progressive political action committee. In addition to donating money, Hoffman is hosting a new Business Leaders for Harris podcast.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Harris, Mark Cuban, Reid Hoffman, Reed Hastings, Aaron Levine, Ken Chenault, Ken Frazier, Chenault, Hastings, Joe Biden, Biden, Hoffman, they're Organizations: Democratic, U.S, Republican, Donald Trump . Business, Dallas Mavericks, LinkedIn, Netflix, Former American Express, Merck, Trump ., Business, PAC, Commission, Harris, Cuban Locations: Las Vegas , Nevada, U.S, Hastings
Read previewLanding a corporate job at Apple is such a big deal for tech workers that some seek out career coaches to help get interviews. Apple is seen as a place where workers 'push boundaries'Apple positions itself as providing more than just a job. AdvertisementAs with its products, Apple has worked to brand itself as having a more playful and curious environment than its competitors. Related storiesEven Apple Park, the company's headquarters in Cupertino, California, has earned the nicknames "the spaceship" and "the ring" for its futuristic circular design. Another Apple hopeful posted that they were "getting desperate" for a job at the company and had applied for 60 jobs in one day.
Persons: , Marc Cenedella, Steve Jobs, Cenedella, They've, Apple, Ehsan Farkhondeh, Arianny Mercedes, they'd, Theresa Park, Mercedes, Dan Ives, Apple's, Drew Evans, Evans Organizations: Service, Apple, Business, Wedbush Securities, American Express, Employees, Spotify, Apple Intelligence Locations: Silicon, Cloud, Cupertino , California
So, what can set you apart from a sea of Apple candidates? We asked an Apple employee and four tech career experts and recruiters. The interview process at Apple is "generally straightforward," Theresa Park, a former creative recruiter at the company, said. Related storiesOne Reddit user said that during a monthlong interview process as a software engineering candidate, he was asked to design a vending machine. According to posts on the anonymous employee forum Blind, some Apple recruiters might even disclose the exact questions that will be asked in an interview.
Persons: , Apple, Dan Ives, Marc Cenedella, Daniel Harten, Harten, Theresa Park, Glassdoor, Tim Cook, Cook, Leander Kahney, Greg Joswiak, Apple's, Kahney, Arianny Mercedes, Park, they've, Cenedella, Apple didn't Organizations: Service, Apple, Apple Intelligence, Business, Big Tech, American Express Locations: tooting, Munich
There has long been speculation that America's most-famous banker has plans to run for some sort of public office. The path from Wall Street to Washington is well worn, with plenty of high-profile executives taking up positions in the government. When most Wall Street executives were still afraid of the public cloud, she was ready to embrace it with open arms. Jon Gray — Treasury SecretaryBlackstone's president and chief operating officer has already had a brush with public office. The idea of him holding public office doesn't seem far-fetched.
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, TikTok, I'm, we've, nabbing, Joe Biden's, Kevin McCarthy's, Jamie Dimon, Larry Downing, hasn't shied, Dimon, Dimon's, Bill Ackman, Kenneth Chenault —, Kathy Hochul, she's, Chenault, He's, Larry Fink —, We've, Larry, Fink, Adena Friedman, Friedman, Jon Gray —, Gray, Donald Trump, Gray's, Wall, Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Ken Griffin, Griffin, hasn't, Griffin hasn't, Ron DeSantis, he'll, Brian Moynihan —, Moynihan, Dan Schulman —, PayPal — he's, Taylor Swift, Kevin Mazur, Larry Fink, Franklin Templeton, It's, Rockefeller, Stephen Schwarzman, Warren Buffett, Cliff Asness, that's, Here's, Jeffrey Cane, Nathan Rennolds Organizations: JPMorgan, REUTERS, Bloomberg, American Express, Catalyst, Washington Post, BlackRock, SEC, CFTC, OCC, Nasdaq, Wall, Democrat, GOP, Florida Gov, Commerce, PayPal, Express, Virgin Mobile, Rockefeller Capital Management, Putnam Investments, Blackstone, Credit Suisse, UBS, Reuters, LinkedIn Locations: NYC, Washington, New York, Florida, Chicago, Miami, Ohio, Swiss, London
Indeed, as Insider reported last week, Mark Zuckerberg isn't ruling out the possibility of more layoffs at Meta. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Dan DeLong/GeekWire1. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg Photo by Liu Jie/Xinhua via Getty2. The tech titans are known for paying the big bucks, but that's not the only way to make it in tech. Tech leaders like Ancestry CEO Deb Liu and Scale AI CEO Lucy Guo will appear on stage.
WageFi raised $400,000 from investors include former American Express and Goldman Sachs executives. Prshant Batra, who founded the company this year and serves as its CEO, previously worked for Goldman Sachs's consumer banking unit, Marcus, and American Express. The startup plans to mainly work with small and medium-sized businesses within the service industry that WageFi believes is underserved with financial products. While this is the first institutional funding for WageFi, Batra said he's not rushing any other fundraising for the company. Here is an exclusive look at the pitch deck WageFi used to raise $400,000 in pre-seed funding.
Total: 7