more on the fortune 1000 companies board overlaps

I have been working (off and on) for awhile to try to get all my names and companies listed here more or less arranged alphabetically and onto a single NNDB map. Unfortunately, it seems to be too much data for one map to handle effectively- or at least the map seems to be permanently bogged down when I try to add more names, so I’ll just have to give you what I’ve got and leave it at that, I think. Actually, I’ve got two different projects here, which I’ll combine in this single post. One is the uncompleted single map, the second one took people’s names who didn’t make it into the original project due to too many of their companies having already made it onto the list and made up a new alternate map for them. So far, I haven’t tried to combine the two lists of names and companies, but I think a rough ballpark figure is that 200 (and change) people’s names would cover ~650 different companies total. I’ll include below links for individual maps for those names and a list of their companies. Larger views of the two maps can be seen by clicking on the screenshots below. And yes, there are still worthy names (using 3M execs as examples- George W. Buckley, Peter G. Peterson and Vance D. Coffman) which didn’t make it onto either map due to company overlaps having pretty well already covered what they would have added at that point.
partial Fortune 1000 alphabetized companies and board directors map
alternate Fortune 1000 map 1

Bobby Ray Inman Admiral, NSA Director, Deputy CIA Director
Jeffrey D. Benjamin Apollo Management
Rozanne L. Ridgway Asst. Secy. of State for Europe, 1985-89
James A. Quella Blackstone Group
Gary G. Michael CEO of Albertson’s, 1991-2001
Tony L. White CEO of Applera
Robert M. Calderoni CEO of Ariba, Inc.
Stephen P. Kaufman CEO of Arrow Electronics, 1986-2
John H. Dasburg CEO of ASTAR Air Cargo
Kenneth T. Derr CEO of Chevron, 1989-99
Richard L. Sharp CEO of Circuit City, 1986-2
J. Michael Cook CEO of Deloitte & Touche, 1989-99
Gerald Grinstein CEO of Delta Air Lines, 2004-07
John P. Reilly CEO of Figgie International, 1995-98
W. James Farrell CEO of Illinois Tool Works, 1995-2005
Arnold W. Donald CEO of Merisant, 2-03
William A. Osborn CEO of Northern Trust, 1995-2008
Michael A. Miles CEO of Philip Morris, 1991-94
H. William Habermeyer, Jr. CEO of Progress Energy Florida
W. Frank Blount CEO of Telstra, 1992-99
J. Pedro Reinhard CFO of Dow Chemical, 1995-2005
J. Michael Losh CFO of General Motors, 1994-2
Jerry York CFO of IBM, 1993-95
Ronald L. Kuehn, Jr. Chairman of El Paso
Gwendolyn S. King Commissioner of Social Security, 1989-92
Charles M. Herington EVP at Avon
Virgis W. Colbert EVP at Miller Brewing, 1997-2005
Felix Rohatyn Financier, Lazard Frères
Rodney F. Chase Former BP executive
Henry B. Schacht Former CEO of Cummins, Lucent
Alan H. Washkowitz Former Partner, Lehman Brothers
David L. Boren Governor and Senator from Oklahoma
Milton Carroll Instrument Products, Inc.
Michael W. Michelson Kohlberg Kravis Roberts
Gerhard Schulmeyer President of Siemens US, 1999-2001
Thomas W. Jones President of TIAA-CREF, 1993-97
John M. Palms President, University of South Carolina, 1991-2002
Joseph B. Anderson, Jr. TAG Holdings LLC
George J. Mitchell US Senator from Maine, 1980-95
Lawrence V. Jackson Wal-Mart executive
Kathryn D. Wriston Wife of Walter B. Wriston

COMPANY
3M
ABB
Abbott Laboratories
Agilent
Alcan
Alcatel-Lucent
Alcoa
Allied Waste Industries
Allstate
Altria
American Airlines
American Axle & Manufacturing
Amphenol
AOL Time Warner
Aon
Apple
Applera
Arrow Electronics
ArvinMeritor
Assurant
AT&T
AutoZone
Avery Dennison
Avon
Baxter International
Biomet
Blackstone Group
Boeing
Boise Cascade
Brink’s
British Petroleum
Brunswick
Burger King
C. R. Bard
Calpine
Cardinal Health
Carmax
Caterpillar
CBS
Celanese
CenterPoint Energy
Chevron
Chiquita Brands
Circuit City
Citigroup
Clorox
Coca Cola
Colgate-Palmolive
Comcast
Computer Sciences Corporation
Conoco-Phillips
Countrywide
Crown Holdings
Cummins
Dana
Dell
Delphi
Delta Airlines
Devon Energy
Disney
Dollar General
Dominion Resources
Dow Chemical
Dun & Bradstreet
Ecolab
EDS
El Paso
Eli Lilly
Emerson Electric
Entergy
Exelon
Exide Technologies
FedEx
Fiat
Flextronics
Fluor
Fortis NV
Freddie Mac
General Motors
Goodyear
Halliburton
Harrah’s Entertainment
Harris Corporation
HCA
IBM
Illinois Tool Works
Ingram Micro
International Flavors & Fragrances
ITT
Johnson & Johnson
Juniper Networks
KLA-Tencor
Korn/Ferry International
Kraft Foods
L-3 Communications
Laclede Group
Lear
Lehman Brothers
Lockheed Martin
Manitowoc
Manpower
Marriott
Marsh & McLennan
Martin Marietta
Masco
Massey Energy
Merrill Lynch
MGM Mirage
Michaels Stores
Molson Coors Brewing
Monsanto
Morgan Stanley
Motorola
Nalco Holding
National Australia Bank
Nicor
NII Holdings
Northern Trust
Northrop Grumman
Northwest Airlines
Northwestern Mutual
OfficeMax
Oracle
Owens-Illinois
PACCAR
Peabody Energy
Pepsi
Pfizer
Potlatch Corporation
Praxair
Progress Energy
Protective Life
Questar
R.R. Donnelley & Sons
Radio Shack
Raymond James Financial
Regions Financial
Reliant Energy
Rite Aid
Royal Bank of Canada
Ryder
Safeway
SAIC
Sara Lee
Schlumberger
Scotts Miracle-Gro
Sears Roebuck
Siemens
Sierra Pacific Resources
Sigma-Aldrich
Southern Co.
Stanley Works
Staples
Starwood Hotels
Telstra
Temple-Inland
Tenneco
Tesco
Tesoro Petroleum
Texas Instruments
The New York Times Company
The Travelers Companies
Thermo Fisher Scientific
Thomas & Betts
TIAA-CREF
Timken
Torchmark
Tribune Co.
TRW Automotive Holdings
Tyco
UAL Corporation
UBS
Unilever
USEC
Vanguard Health Systems
Virgin Media
Wal-Mart
Winn-Dixie
WR Grace & Co.
Xerox
Zürich Financial Services

2 Responses to “more on the fortune 1000 companies board overlaps”

  1. US and EU close to sharing their datamines, Wall Street wants to continue oil speculation « We Can Change The World Says:

    [...] of some of the top oil, securities and banking board interlocks. It’s nowhere near as big as some of the other board interlock maps I’ve worked on in the past since it is focused on a few narrow segments rather than the bigger picture. Separately, lobbyists [...]

  2. Fortune 1000 « .:: Peta Konsep Anak Bangsa ::. Says:

    [...] We Can Change The World to find out more information about Fortune [...]

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