Bayer Supports International Competition for Upcoming Managers
Leverkusen, November 2009. Friedrich Foerster showed the
greatest talent of all this year’s budding managers. The 27-year-old medical student from
Heidelberg won the final of the "CEO of the Future 2009" career advancement contest held in
Kitzbühel, Austria. Foerster gave the most convincing strategy presentation – based on a case study
– to a panel of leading industry and media personalities that included Bayer CEO Werner Wenning.
Top Executives Chose "CEO of the Future"
Some 2,700 students and young professionals took part in the competition. Second place went to
Florian Hürlimann (30), a mechanical engineering graduate from Zurich, and third was Savina Belcher
(27), a business development manager from Berlin.
For Bayer and other leading European companies, the competition serves as a vehicle to
promote international talent. The three prizewinners received cash prizes of 15,000, 10,000 and
5,000 euros respectively, which they can spend on education and training as they see fit. In
addition, they will receive personal coaching from the CEO of a company – Friedrich Foerster will
soon be getting an invitation from Werner Wenning. “We are particularly committed to promoting
science and education,” Wenning commented. “We want to attract talented juniors to our company and
support young people who have the potential to assume senior management responsibilities and take
on challenging leadership assignments.”
In the case study that Bayer provided for the deciding round in Kitzbühel, the three
candidates had to devise an optimal distribution structure to address developments in the German
pharmaceuticals market. Questions set by other companies included: “How could you make one of
Germany’s state-owned regional banks fit for privatization within three years?” and “How could you
optimize an automaker’s components division?” Linking the case studies so closely to current
economic themes provided an exciting challenge for the competitors. In earlier rounds, candidates
had been given the chance to prove themselves as crisis managers of an imaginary auto supplier or
garment manufacturer. As CEO, they were charged with preparing a 100-day crisis response program
for their virtual company. These programs were then presented to shareholders at simulated
supervisory board meetings.
In Kitzbühel, the twenty finalists presented to a panel of judges consisting of Vodafone
Germany CEO Friedrich Joussen, Ergo Insurance Group CEO Torsten Oletzky, Credit Suisse Germany and
Central Europe CEO Michael Rüdiger, Audi CEO Rupert Stadler, Bayer CEO Werner Wenning, McKinsey
Germany CEO Frank Mattern and former McKinsey Europe CEO Herbert Henzler. The media sector was
represented on the panel by Hans Demmel, CEO of current affairs broadcaster n-tv, Rüdiger Ditz,
chief editor of Spiegel Online and Martin Noé, deputy chief editor of manager magazin.
Further details of the competition can be found at
www.future-ceo.de.