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Good morning. More finance chiefs are being considered for chief executive roles. But the C-suite trend of CFO-to-CEO increasingly includes execs with operational acumen of the core business and strategy experience, in addition to finance.
Take, for instance, Bob Frenzel, CEO of Xcel Energy (No. 302 on the Fortune 500), one of the largest public utilities in the country. Frenzel joined the company in 2016 as EVP and CFO. In 2020, he began serving as president and chief operating officer, where he led Xcel Energy’s four utility operating companies, in addition to the transmission, distribution, and natural gas operations. Frenzel was promoted to chairman, president, and CEO in 2021. His operational experience first began after college when he served in the U.S. Navy for six years, working as a nuclear engineering officer and weapons officer.
Frenzel's CFO roots continue to serve him well. "We spend a lot of time thinking about the cost of capital," he said of Xcel Energy during a fireside chat last week at Semafor’s World Economy Summit in Washington, D.C. "We deploy probably $10 billion of capital a year. As an industry, we're probably $200 billion a year of capital deployment."
U.S. electricity demand is projected to grow by 3% annually through 2030 following decades of stagnation, driven by the adoption of new devices and technologies, Al-driven data centers and the resurgence of manufacturing, according to the company's latest white paper.
Following his talk, I asked Frenzel about what prepared him for the CEO role and his thoughts on leading during uncertain times. Here's what he had to say:
How has your financial background contributed to your leadership as CEO?
I attended the University of Chicago to get an MBA and our accounting professor there, who is world-renowned, would say that accounting is the language of business, and sometimes business is the language of leadership. As a company, we're very capital-intensive, one of the most capital-intensive industries in the United States. And so understanding how to raise capital, deploy capital, manage budgets, and balance budgets, is important in the business, and it could be in making electricity or making a manufacturing device. I think having that financial background is very helpful.
Is operational experience helpful as well?
I'm a recovering CFO, but I'm also a nuclear engineer, so I did start my career in making electricity. I always like to think I've been making electricity for three decades. Yes, in this industry, having a background in energy, generation, transmission, engineering, or construction, all those things are things that we do, is helpful.