I suppose this would depend on the organization. In many cases, the vice-presidents serve at the discretion of the CEO and can be asked to resign by the CEO.
President, Vice President, Senior Vice President, CEO, Managers in every Department, Supervisors, Secretaries and many to mention. It depends on what the company needs.
GE Appliances President and CEO is Larry JohnstonFerdinando "Nani" Beccalli-FalcoPresident and CEO of GE EuropeCEO GE GermanyCharlene Begleypresident and CEOGE Home & Business SolutionsSenior Vice President andChief Information Officer GE
A store officer is usually part of the management staffing. He or she would include president, vice president, CEO, CFO, and COO among others.
Yes CEO is higher than the president
Within a larger commercial company are many upper management positions. Depending on the company the President could also be the CEO. However, the CEO never outranks the President.
yes
Haliburton
President, Vice President, Senior Vice President, CEO, Managers in every Department, Supervisors, Secretaries and many to mention. It depends on what the company needs.
In the US government the President is higher, but in a company the CEO is the highest. In order to clarify this it should be noted that the office of CEO does not exist in the US Government. Also, in the business world a person can be both the CEO, Chief Executive Officer and President.
Every department head and sometimes the president and vice president of a corporation report to the CEO. The CEO makes all final decisions regarding the company.
because he's not the boss
I don't know that there is necessarily a "vice president" of Ford Models but the CEO is John Caplan and the Chairman is Jon Diamond.
No. The president is the ceo of the United States and the vice president presides over the senate, but has no vote execept to break a tie.
Security Pacific National Bank, 1987-1990, vice chairman; 1990-1993, president and COO; Star Banc Corporation, 1993-1998, chairman, CEO, and president; Firstar, 1998-2001, CEO and president; U.S. Bancorp, 2001-2003, CEO and president; 2003
They can't but, if the president could fire the vice president, this could mean that the person who is the vice president was not the person citizens voted for in the presidential elections. First, that could cause anger amongst people who would feel cheated/betrayed. Secondly, the president could carefully select who they wanted to be vice president so that the vice president agrees with everything the president says, giving more power to the president (turning the vice president into a 'puppet leader').
They can't but, if the president could fire the vice president, this could mean that the person who is the vice president was not the person citizens voted for in the presidential elections. First, that could cause anger amongst people who would feel cheated/betrayed. Secondly, the president could carefully select who they wanted to be vice president so that the vice president agrees with everything the president says, giving more power to the president (turning the vice president into a 'puppet leader').
"President and CEO"