{
  "docId": "019dd923-622c-750b-8b9c-571191cc7adb",
  "docSlug": "48a8cbf2f1d7",
  "documentTitle": "Arconic Inc. (ARNC)",
  "authorId": "02_Elliott_Management",
  "authorName": "Elliott",
  "documentKindSlug": "activist-deck",
  "documentKindLabel": "Activist deck",
  "sourceTypeSlug": "activist_investor",
  "sourceTypeLabel": "Activist investor",
  "presentationDate": "2017-04-11 00:00:00",
  "orientation": "landscape",
  "aspectRatio": 1.3333334,
  "pageNumber": 219,
  "pageCount": 336,
  "prevPage": 218,
  "nextPage": 220,
  "slideType": "ceo_quote",
  "function": "name_villain",
  "density": "dense",
  "nDataPoints": 0,
  "notes": "The slide uses a Jim Collins quote to frame the CEO as a 'villain' figure who prioritizes ego over company success.",
  "elementsJson": [
    "headline_text",
    "quote_block"
  ],
  "metadataConfidence": 1,
  "imagePath": null,
  "slideHref": "/slides/019dd923-622c-750b-8b9c-571191cc7adb/219",
  "deckHref": "/decks/019dd923-622c-750b-8b9c-571191cc7adb",
  "deckJsonHref": "/decks/019dd923-622c-750b-8b9c-571191cc7adb.json",
  "deckAnchorHref": "/decks/019dd923-622c-750b-8b9c-571191cc7adb#slide-219",
  "components": [
    {
      "bbox": null,
      "kind": "callout",
      "text": "Celebrity CEOs, at those same decision points, are more likely to favor self and ego over company and work.",
      "attrs": null,
      "subkind": null,
      "toolName": "Visual emphasis",
      "toolSlug": "visual-emphasis",
      "confidence": null,
      "componentId": "019dd953-0393-73a7-a09c-12e59e5036ca",
      "frameworkName": null,
      "frameworkSlug": null
    },
    {
      "bbox": {
        "h": 0.05,
        "w": 0.25,
        "x": 0.7,
        "y": 0.75
      },
      "kind": "paragraph",
      "text": "Jim Collins, Fast Company",
      "attrs": null,
      "subkind": "paragraph",
      "toolName": null,
      "toolSlug": null,
      "confidence": null,
      "componentId": "8a9b2e4b-8521-49d7-98ec-395a0316b935",
      "frameworkName": null,
      "frameworkSlug": null
    },
    {
      "bbox": {
        "h": 0.5,
        "w": 0.9,
        "x": 0.05,
        "y": 0.25
      },
      "kind": "quote",
      "text": "There is a direct relationship between the absence of celebrity and the presence of good-to-great results. Why? First, when you have a celebrity, the company turns into ‘the one genius with 1,000 helpers.’ ... Celebrity CEOs, at those same decision points, are more likely to favor self and ego over company and work.",
      "attrs": null,
      "subkind": "pull-quote",
      "toolName": null,
      "toolSlug": null,
      "confidence": null,
      "componentId": "f826605d-9f87-4df5-9597-a5775027609c",
      "frameworkName": null,
      "frameworkSlug": null
    },
    {
      "bbox": null,
      "kind": "quote",
      "text": "“There is a direct relationship between the absence of celebrity and the presence of good-to-great results. Why? First, when you have a celebrity, the company turns into ‘the one genius with 1,000 helpers.’ It creates a sense that the whole thing is really about the CEO. At a deeper level, we found that for leaders to make something great, their ambition has to be for the greatness of the work and the company, rather than for themselves. That doesn’t mean that they don’t have an ego. It means that at each decision point—at each of the critical junctures when Choice A would favor their ego and Choice B would favor the company and the work—time and again the good-to-great leaders pick Choice B. Celebrity CEOs, at those same decision points, are more likely to favor self and ego over company and work.” — Jim Collins, Fast Company",
      "attrs": null,
      "subkind": null,
      "toolName": "Authority citation",
      "toolSlug": "authority-citation",
      "confidence": null,
      "componentId": "019dd953-0393-73a7-a09c-15c44ced9e0d",
      "frameworkName": null,
      "frameworkSlug": null
    },
    {
      "bbox": {
        "h": 0.03,
        "w": 0.35,
        "x": 0.02,
        "y": 0.93
      },
      "kind": "source-note",
      "text": "Source: www.jimcollins.com/article_topics/articles/good-to-great.html",
      "attrs": null,
      "subkind": null,
      "toolName": null,
      "toolSlug": null,
      "confidence": null,
      "componentId": "866c9931-16da-4d63-abef-2d50296dac1d",
      "frameworkName": null,
      "frameworkSlug": null
    },
    {
      "bbox": {
        "h": 0.1,
        "w": 0.4,
        "x": 0.05,
        "y": 0.05
      },
      "kind": "title",
      "text": "Broken Company Culture: Arconic’s Celebrity CEO",
      "attrs": null,
      "subkind": "headline",
      "toolName": null,
      "toolSlug": null,
      "confidence": null,
      "componentId": "e4c89da5-7e4d-4b4e-9125-44a352c169d8",
      "frameworkName": null,
      "frameworkSlug": null
    }
  ],
  "metrics": [],
  "tools": [],
  "frameworks": [
    {
      "name": "ceo-quote-contradiction",
      "slug": null,
      "matchId": "45e8520e-cb78-4bc5-b74c-4608982fe0cd",
      "evidence": "Uses a famous management quote to contrast the current CEO's behavior with 'good-to-great' leadership principles.",
      "confidence": 0.9
    }
  ],
  "arcBeats": [],
  "loops": [],
  "imagePathAlt": null,
  "thumbSrc": null,
  "thumbSrcAlt": null,
  "locked": true
}