Royal, Cindy L.Price, Kathryn Renee2015-08-192015-08-192015-05Price, K. R. (2015). Women in the men's club: How to survive the chief executive officer position (Unpublished thesis). Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas.https://hdl.handle.net/10877/5626In 2014 women represented 51% of the professional and technical work force in the U.S., while in the same year, women held 5.1% of Fortune 500 CEO positions (Dorning, Catalyst, Historical List of Women CEOs of the Fortune Lists). Women reach the top in successful multimillion-dollar companies, but are stopping short of earning the title Chief Executive Officer (CEO). The ones that are able to take hold of the CEO position are the outliers in society. This level of success is attributed to patterns in their career paths. What do these women have in common? This work examines five different women that have become CEOs and utilizes their different experiences to identify specific points that they share. An explanation of these five executives provides insight into what women must do to become CEO. The theory is that these patterns have contributed to at least part, if not for the whole, of their success.Text37 pages1 file (.pdf)enwomen CEOsmedia industrywomen in leadership rolesHonors CollegeWomen In the Men's Club: How to Survive the Chief Executive Officer Position