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Irene Rosenfeld

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Full Name
  
Irene Blecker

Salary
  
$10.5 million (2009)

Children
  
2 daughters

Role
  
Executive

Years active
  
1980s–present

Religion
  
Judaism

Name
  
Irene Rosenfeld

Irene Rosenfeld Irene Rosenfeld Corporate Executives
Born
  
May 3, 1953 (age 70) (
1953-05-03
)

Title
  
Chairwoman and CEO ofMondelez International

Spouse
  
Philip Rosenfeld (m. 1977–1995), Richard Illgen

Education
  
Cornell University (1980), Cornell University (1977), Cornell University (1975), W. Tresper Clarke High School

Similar People
  
Indra Nooyi, Ginni Rometty, Tony Vernon, Todd Stitzer, John T Cahill

Irene rosenfeld biography forbes most powerful woman in business


Irene Blecker Rosenfeld (born May 3, 1953) is an American business executive, the chairwoman and CEO of Mondelez International.

Contents

Irene rosenfeld


Early life and education

Irene Rosenfeld archivefortunecomassetsi2cdnturnercommoney

Rosenfeld was born to a Jewish family in Westbury, New York, the daughter of Seymour and Joan Blecker. Her father’s parents were Romanian Jews, her mother’s grandparents were German Jews. She later attended W. Tresper Clarke High School in Westbury, NY. She holds a Ph.D. in Marketing and Statistics, a Master of Science in Business, and a B.A. degree in Psychology from Cornell University.

Career

Irene Rosenfeld Irene Rosenfeld Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Rosenfeld has been involved in the food and beverage industry for about 30 years. Her first job was at Dancer Fitzgerald Sample advertising agency in New York and she later joined General Foods in consumer research.

Irene Rosenfeld Women in Business Spotlight on Irene Rosenfeld US

In 2004, Rosenfeld was appointed Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer of Frito-Lay, a division of PepsiCo, where she focused on promoting healthy products.

Irene Rosenfeld Irene Rosenfeld Kraft Foods39s chief executive has a

In June 2006, Rosenfeld was appointed Chief Executive Officer of Kraft Foods. She joined General foods which later became a part of Kraft foods. Among her many accomplishments at Kraft foods, she led the restructuring and turnaround of key business in the US, Canada and Moscow. She is active in a number of industry and community organisations, including the Economic Club of Chicago. She was appointed to the additional post of Chairperson in March 2007, following Altria Group's spin-off of Kraft.

In 2008, she was placed sixth on The Wall Street Journal's "50 Women to Watch" list. Rosenfeld has been listed multiple times as one of the 100 most powerful women in the world by Forbes. In 2014, she was ranked at 15th, just behind Oprah Winfrey.

In 2010, Rosenfeld earned total compensation of $19.288 million, placing her 48th on the Forbes Executive Pay.

Rosenfeld is a member of the Economic Club of Chicago. She also serves on the Board of Directors for the Grocery Manufacturers Association and the Cornell University Board of Trustees. She also sits on the Board of Directors of the Consumer Goods Forum.

On August 4, 2011, Kraft Foods said it plans to split into two publicly traded companies, with one focusing on its international snack brands like Trident gum and Oreo cookies and the other on its North American groceries business that includes Maxwell House coffee and Oscar Mayer meats.

On December 5, 2011, Kraft announced that Rosenfeld would stay on as chairperson of the $31 billion global snacking company, which will be called Mondelez International, Inc. Tony Vernon, the president of Kraft Foods North America, will become CEO of the $17 billion North American grocery business, which will keep the Kraft Foods name.

References

Irene Rosenfeld Wikipedia