| New faces and changing perceptions
by Robert
C. Powell III
Virginia Business
August 2006 Virginia is witnessing
the changing of the guard. Over the last year and a half, 11 of the commonwealth's
18 Fortune 500 companies have announced new CEOs. Charlottesville-based
writer Jack Milligan talks with several new
top executives to find out what challenges they face in a rapidly
changing economy. Milligan also catches up with Walfrido “Wally” Martinez , the constantly traveling new managing partner of
Hunton & Williams. The venerated law firm is based
in Richmond, but Martinez lives in Connecticut.
New CEOs aren't the only sign
of change in the Old Dominion. Managing Editor Paula
Squires reports that
a relatively high percentage of the state’s
university and college presidents are women. Her story explores why many women
have made it to the top in academia while so few have become top executives
at major companies.
Women, nonetheless, are making headway in one formerly male preserve, financial
services. Author R. J. Shook has compiled his second list of the best
financial advisers in the state, and this year six women are on the list.
Veterinary
medicine is another field where women are making a difference. They
make up 80 percent of the students in many vet schools. The changing demographics
of veterinarians represent just one sign of the shifts taking place in the industry,
with many practices being purchased by large corporations.
Another major shift involves
our perception of the commonwealth’s
metropolitan areas. Virginia typically is seen as having four large metro
areas: Washington,
D.C. (Northern Virginia); Richmond-Petersburg; Hampton Roads and Roanoke.
But demographers say that the Washington and Richmond areas will soon
grow together,
creating a huge metro region that will create new opportunities and exacerbate
old problems.
Change, after all, is always a combination of gain and pain.
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