Mobile browser, if that makes a difference (maybe one of the people on the list helped me downsize as well at some point without me realizing it).
For example, "CEO and CFO appointments at US public companies in the last two weeks" found 142 records [0]
You can also set up monitors to get updates.
[0] https://platform.newscatcherapi.com/catchall/example/gtm--ex...
At the top it says:
> 2,100+ > CEO, CFO, Board, and other executive changes tracked in the past 30 days
Could you add a little metric there such as how many companies are being tracked, and perhaps how that compares to the previous 30 days, or 6 months ago, or 12 months ago?
Maybe a graph showing how many changes happen each month, so we can see when things are more volatile or not.
I remember giving this task to a summer co-op 10-12 years ago. it was alot harder to scrape the edgar site then and gather all for form 4 filings without the new api call first interface and the XBML markup in 10-K and 10-Q filings.
Curious if you’ve looked at second-order signals yet (e.g. clusters of execs moving across the same companies)?
I was thinking it was interesting more from the socioeconomic perspective:
1. Senior execs are still "working for the man", even if their compensation is materially different from other employees, except in the case of founders of mega-caps.
2. From a socioeconomic lifestyle perspective, the primary differentiator is that senior executives can afford larger one-time costs/upfront costs due to their equity compensation, but have to maintain fairly similar ongoing costs to senior ICs. E.g. a senior exec can afford to buy a nicer house in SFBA because of Prop 13 limiting ongoing property taxes and the ability to shell out more up front to either avoid a mortgage or minimize payments, but their ongoing lifestyle expenses otherwise are most likely not materially different.
Basically, given the rhetoric, I was expecting that senior execs were essentially living in a totally different parallel world from senior ICs in tech, but it doesn't seem that this is really the case /other than/ probably social connections and society. In both cases these employees are highly compensated, but still ultimately employees, and neither is on a rocketship into the billionaire class. The difference between a billionaire and a 50-millioniare (senior exec) is about a billion dollars, the difference between a billionaire and a 3-millionaire (senior IC) is about a billion dollars.
Maybe my take is wrong, but I'd expect that is more about fringe benefits (e.g. access to corporate PJ) than direct compensation.
And I don’t mean this in a negative way simply that this is just a 30min UI around a 1 hour LLM data pipeline.
It's definitely vibecodeable but there's a decent amount of edge cases and ongoing maintenance that add up. I'm sure an actual engineer could do it way better. I just wanted the product, couldn't find one at a reasonable price, so I built it.
Starbucks CTO explains carefully that they do not actually know how many employees there are, in their own enterprise, at any give hour