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New Gates Chief Brings Midwestern Values to His Job

October 9, 2008 | Read Time: 1 minute

While Jeffrey S. Raikes has been at his current job just a short time, the new chief executive of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation โ€œis putting his stamp on the cultureโ€ of the organization, writes Patricia Sellers, editor-at-large for Fortune magazine.

On her blog for the publication, Postcards from the Pinnacles of Power, she writes that in โ€œsessions with employees, heโ€™s been talking about his 10 values and how he works them into his life and career. Value No. 1: work ethic. He grew up on a Nebraska corn farm, so it was up early and work hard.โ€

The other values include passion, diversity, humor, devotion to community, and conservative spending.

โ€œHeโ€™s plainspoken, bordering on folksy, but the style seems to work with a foundation staff thatโ€™s all about saving the world,โ€ writes Ms. Sellers, who says she got to know Mr. Raikes and his wife while writing a profile of Melinda Gates.

Despite her insight into the chief executive of Americaโ€™s largest philanthropy, Ms. Sellersโ€™s laudatory tone drew jeers from the anonymous author of Gates Keepers, a blog that is critical of the foundation.


โ€œHere is a postcard fluff piece on Raikes, including bullet points on the values he says he lives by to illustrate how good he is. Actions will speak louder than words. Is โ€˜conservative spendingโ€™ a positive value at the foundation?โ€ the writer asks.

(Read The Chronicleโ€™s article about Mr. Raikes.)

What do you think? What questions do you have for Mr. Raikes? What will you look for to see if his tenure at the foundation is successful?

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