Tips on how to become a CEO, quickly

Michael Rubin started his business career at age 13, running a ski-tuning shop 
out of his parents' basement. He went on to open several retail ski shops
in New York and Pennsylvania by the time he graduated from high school.

Now 34, Rubin is chief executive of GSI Commerce, a King of Prussia (Pa.)-based 
e-commerce company with $524.6 million in revenue in the 12 months ended
Sept. 30.

Meet the new boss, younger than the old boss. Rubin is one of approximately 140 
executives age 40 or younger who are chief executive officers of publicly
traded companies around the world, according to data compiled by Capital IQ. Of 
these, nearly 100 are located within the U.S., while another 40 or so lead
companies headquartered in other countries. The youngest, Harry Vafias, CEO of 
StealthGas in Athens, Greece, is only 28.
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• Table: U.S. CEOs 40 and Under
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For generations, the corner office has been the domain of experience, occupied 
in literature and film by crusty old-timers like Ebenezer Scrooge or It's
a Wonderful Life's Mr. Potter. In more recent decades, investors grew 
accustomed to fresher faces, as such young visionaries as Microsoft's Bill Gates
and Apple's Steve Jobs helped lead the 1980s personal-computing revolution.

Now, a new generation of 40-and-under CEOs offers proof that today's young 
entrepreneurs can scale the corporate ladder, too.

Tech Ladder

The tech sector may still be the quickest road to the top. More public-company 
CEOs age 40 and under lead organizations involved in technology products
or services than work in any other industry. These companies range from online 
travel publisher Travelzoo to semiconductor materials provider Cree and
software maker Borland.

A tech background can also help executives in related businesses, such as 
retail. Michael Soenen, 36-year-old chief of flower seller FTD, recalls becoming
CEO of his company's Web division in 1999. "Internet CEOs were young by nature, 
and the success we were having made me a logical choice," Soenen explains.

"Having run that business successfully, becoming CEO of FTD Inc. was a natural 
extension for me."
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Many of the youngest CEOs achieved their position by launching their own 
companies from scratch. "If you really want to be a CEO at a young age, start a
company and call yourself a CEO," says David Liu, who recently turned 41 but 
has been CEO of wedding information Web site The Knot since age 30.

Experience Can't Hurt

Sometimes the hardest part may just be getting started. "You can't wait until 
you know all the answers," says 36-year-old Taser International CEO Rick Smith,
who started his stun-gun operation in a garage at age 23. "You never will. When 
your gut tells you there's an opportunity there, you have to take it."

Others suggest seeking out a broad range of experiences en route to the corner 
office. Jonathan Huberman, now 41, became CEO of Zip-disk storage device
maker Iomega earlier this year at age 40, following stints in tech, management 
consulting, venture capital, and hedge funds. "Look for diversity of 
experiences,
because to be a CEO you need to be able to understand and set strategy for 
every facet of the business," Huberman says.

While it's never easy to be a CEO, for those 40 and under it can be even more 
challenging. "It changes your life top to bottom," says Jordan Greenhall,
35-year-old chief of digital video compression software maker DivX. "Not as 
much as having children, but in that same zone."

Ready for Risk

And like having children, CEOs typically say the job is worth any sleepless 
nights. "I have to say I really love it," says Michael Chasen, 35-year-old head
of school software developer Blackboard. "I thrive on the fast pace and 
excitement in running a fast-growth, successful company."

The people who become CEO at a young age are increasingly unafraid to take 
risks, notes Peter Cappelli, a management professor at the University of 
Pennsylvania's
Wharton School. "They're willing to look for opportunities to stand out," 
Cappelli explains. Still, he cautions that bigger appetites for risk may have
unwanted consequences, citing the Enron scandal.

Today's young CEOs are likely to have a better understanding of technology and 
globalization than did the bright up-and-comers of decades past, adds Michael
Feiner, a management professor at Columbia University Graduate School of 
Business and author of The Feiner Points of Leadership. "The biggest challenge
is the leading-people piece," Feiner says. "It takes a while for even really 
smart CEOs to understand it's people first, strategy second. That comes from
experience and mistakes, and I don't think there's a shortcut."

Passion Projects

Meanwhile, new CEOs are taking on the mantle at a time of unprecedented 
turnover. Corner-office job changes this year are on pace to top last year's 
record
1,322 departures, according to Chicago consulting firm Challenger, Gray & 
Christmas.

Such big-name companies as Bristol-Myers Squibb, Ford and Viacom were among 
those making CEO switches in 2006.

Ultimately, a CEO of any age needs to have a passion for the job. "You can have 
all the products and packaging and scale that you need to perform, but really
none of that takes you any place if you don't have the right attitude about the 
business," says Mariner Kemper, 34-year-old head of Kansas City (Mo.)-based
financial services company UMB Financial.

The best CEOs grow into the position because they followed what excited them, 
not because they set out to become CEOs, adds Mark Vadon, 36-year-old chief
of online jewelry retailer Blue Nile.

"Do something that you really love doing," Vadon advises. "If you're not doing 
something that you really like, you're not going to be that successful at
it."
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