Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer talks about the hardest parts of her job
Mayer believes her leadership style can be described in a word: "Listening." However, she admitted that doing so is "always a challenge."

Speaking at the Fortune Global Forum on Tuesday in San Francisco, Meyer explained:
"I think of leadership as listening," she says. Her mentor Eric Schmidt, executive chairman of Google's new parent company Alphabet taught her that her "job as an executive is to set a vision, listen to the team and get things out of the way so they can run at that vision as fast as they can."
In her early days, she made listening to her employees her top priority. She retold the famous story of how she went to the cafeteria each day for a couple of hours, letting all employees share their ideas with her.
This was hard for her.
"I'm actually quite shy so it was a challenge for me," she said.
It's led to some of her most trusted executives giving up on Yahoo and taking jobs elsewhere. She's "feeling the pressure," people close to Yahoo told Business Insider, and some people have accused her of no longer listening to others like she did in those early months.
An attendee at Fortune brought that up indirectly, asking how she "keeps people patient" during a long turnaround.
Mayer admitted that doing so is "always a challenge."
For instance, she says that Yahoo's fantasy football could expand into the hot new thing, of "daily fantasy" teams. Other areas she thinks will excite her employees include applying artificial intelligence to search or Yahoo mail.
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