Book description
President, whistleblower, crusader. Exposure is the story of
how Michael Woodford exposed the dark heart of Olympus.
When Michael Woodford was made President and CEO of Olympus, he
became the first Westerner ever to climb the ranks of one of Japan's
corporate icons.
Then his dream job turned into a nightmare.
He learned about a series of bizarre mergers and acquisitions deals
totalling . 7 billion - a scandal which if exposed threatened to bring
down the entire company. He turned to his fellow executives but was
met with hostility and a cover-up. Within weeks he was fired in a
boardroom coup that shocked the international business world. As
rumours emerged of Yakuza (mafia) involvement in the scandal, Woodford
fled Japan in fear of his life. He went straight to the press -
becoming the first CEO of a multinational to blow the whistle on his
own company.
Exposure is a deeply personal memoir that reads like a
thriller. As Woodford himself puts it, 'I thought I was going to run a
health-care and consumer electronics company but found I had walked
into a John Grisham novel.'
'Tells his tale like a thriller. A fine book by a fine man who did
the right thing' -The Times
'A brilliantly gripping book, with a great hero at its heart'
-Evening Standard
Michael Woodford grew up in Liverpool and joined Olympus as a
medical equipment salesman, rising through the ranks to run its UK,
MEA and European businesses. In April 2011 he was appointed President
and COO of the Olympus Corporation - the first Western 'salary-man' to
rise through the ranks to the top of a Japanese giant. That October he
was made CEO, but only two weeks later was dismissed after querying
inexplicable payments approaching billion. He was named Business
Person of the Year 2011 by the Sunday Times, the Independent
and the Sun, and won the Financial Times
Arcelor-Mittal Award for Boldest Businessperson of the Year. He
lives in London with his wife and two teenage children.
Michael Woodford grew up in Liverpool and joined Olympus as a medical
equipment salesman, rising through the ranks to run its UK, MEA and
European businesses. In April 2011 he was appointed President and COO of
the Olympus Corporation - the first Western 'salary-man' to rise through
the ranks to the top of a Japanese giant. That October he was made CEO,
but only two weeks later was dismissed after querying inexplicable
payments approaching billion. He was named Business Person of the Year
2011 by the
Sunday Times
, the
Independent
and the
Sun
, and won the
Financial Times
ArcelorMittal Award for Boldness in Business. He lives in London with
his wife and two teenage children.