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In 2010, Gail Kelly found herself on a list she didn’t much care for.
The compilation in question was Forbes Magazine’s annual collection of the world’s most powerful women.
Appearing on lists was nothing new for Kelly. In her 20 years in Australian banking – first as general manager at Commonwealth Bank, then running the emerging St George Bank and lastly as head of the giant Westpac (which would buy St George on her watch) – she had been on scores of them, graduating from being merely one of Sydney’s ‘most powerful’ people when she was appointed to St George, to one of the ‘world’s 50 greatest leaders’ at the peak of her powers at Westpac.
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