This year’s 100 Most Creative People offers
our own, idiosyncratic perspective on business. The selections reflect the
breadth of news ideas and new pursuits at play in our business landscape. Here
we present the top 10 from list of innovators.
10. Qi
Lu – President of Online Services, Bing; Microsoft
It’s hard to imagine software giant Microsoft
in the role of David, but up against the search Goliath Google, the casting
fits. Spurning the antiquated practice of releasing new updates every couple of
years, Lu is creating an environment where live-cycle updates and product
improvements are constant. Bing’s share of the search business is still only
about 12%, but if anyone can turn a pebble into a deadly stone, Lu is the man.
More after the break...
9.
James Cameron – Filmmaker, Lightstorm Entertainment
Not only did Avatar become the highest-grossing
film in history (nearly $2.7 billion worldwide) — surpassing Cameron’s previous
record setter, Titanic — but its visual spectacle and technical mastery also
laid to rest any doubts about 3-D as a profound medium for live action and
artistic ambition. When it comes to the business of Hollywood, Avatar cemented
his place in the realm of the gods.
3. Elizabeth Warren – Consumer advocate, Congressional Oversight Panel
2. Eddy Cue – VP of Internet services, Apple
1. Lady Gaga – Pop Artist
8.
Hannah Jones – VP of Sustainable Business and Innovation, Nike
Jones says she joined Nike’s sustainability
team to test whether it was “more effective to shout from the outside or work
from the inside.” Her conclusion: The creative combination of both is the most
potent. She has paired Nike with NASA and venture capitalists to address water
shortages; with Creative Commons to launch GreenXchange, a platform for
companies to share green intellectual property; and with PopTech to create an
Open Collaboration Lab for scientists and engineers.
7.
Chris Anderson – Curator, TED Conferences
As chief curator of TED — the Long Beach,
California, conference of multidisciplinary luminaries turned viral-video
phenomenon turned cultural juggernaut — the Brit has guided it into a newly
global, open-source phase this year. Volunteers have translated thousands of
videos into 76 languages and introduced TEDx, independently organized events
that in the first year has produced an astonishing 500 gatherings in 70
countries and 35 languages.
6.
Steve Burd – CEO, Safeway
Steve Burd played a crucial role in the recent
health-care debate. The exec appeared repeatedly on Capitol Hill to describe the
health and financial benefits of the grocery chain’s unconventional wellness
program, which includes lower insurance premiums for nonunion employees who
maintain healthy blood-pressure and cholesterol levels and don’t smoke. Burd
insists that the company’s health-care costs rose just 2% from 2005 to 2009
compared to a nearly 40% increase for most companies. “The Safeway amendment” —
a provision that increases the incentives companies can pay healthy employees —
is now law.
5.
Ryan Murphy – Creator and Producer, Glee
The Peabody-winning Fox series Glee, his satire
about a high-school show choir, has become a ratings rock star. It’s the No. 1
show among female teens and the top new show among women 18 to 49, and more of
its viewership is made up of 18- to 49-year-olds in households making
$100,000-plus than any other broadcast-network show.Glee has also spawned more
than 50 iTunes singles — Murphy picks all the songs himself — as well as three
soundtracks and a sold-out concert tour.
4.
Shiro Nakamura – Chief Creative Officer, Nissan
With the zero-emissions Leaf — which
goes on sale later this year and is the first global mass-market electric car —
he has tried to put his finger on the consumer pulse and make a car that will
sell. “We did not want to make something very strange for just the niche buyer,”
Nakamura said last year. That hews to his belief that creativity at its best
isn’t about just doing whatever you want: “More designers have to understand the
values of society and the people they are creating the vehicles for.”
3. Elizabeth Warren – Consumer advocate, Congressional Oversight Panel
By calling the likes of Citigroup CEO Vikram
Pandit on the carpet, jawboning with Jon Stewart, and pushing to create a
consumer financial protection agency, Harvard law professor Elizabeth Warren has
taken what could have been a paper-pushing position as chair of the
Congressional Oversight Panel on the bank bailout to the forefront of the public
conversation over financial reform.
2. Eddy Cue – VP of Internet services, Apple
Steve Jobs may own the limelight, but Eddy Cue
holds the key to the Apple kingdom. Cue runs arguably the most disruptive
21st-century Web businesses: iTunes and the App Store, the latter of which is
poised to create a $4 billion app economy by 2012. Cue’s next campaign will be
challenging Amazon’s Kindle dominance, with the Cupertino cocktail of the iPad
and the iBook store.
1. Lady Gaga – Pop Artist
Gaga broke through last year as a global
phenomenon, musing on “disco sticks,” channeling Madonna’s glitter-glam fashion,
and cribbing shock-rock performance notes from Alice Cooper. Gaga has done
something unprecedented, melding her inspirations with au courant dance pop and
Web savvy to build a business empire notable for both the speed of its creation
and the diversity of its platforms.
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