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Dame Helen Alexander with the CBI's logo as backdrop.
Dame Helen Alexander in 2009, the year she took on the presidency of the CBI. Photograph: Fiona Hanson/PA
Dame Helen Alexander in 2009, the year she took on the presidency of the CBI. Photograph: Fiona Hanson/PA

Dame Helen Alexander, first female head of CBI, dies aged 60

This article is more than 6 years old

Former chief executive of Economist Group praised as brilliant leader who made case for diversity in the boardroom

Businesswoman Dame Helen Alexander, the first female president of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), has died aged 60, the Economist has announced.

Alexander, who was chief executive of the Economist Group between 1997 and 2008, died on Saturday, the newspaper said.

Her long career included boardroom roles at companies including Rolls-Royce and British Gas parent Centrica.

Alongside Sir Philip Hampton, she also undertook the independent Hampton Alexander review, which looked at increasing the representation of women in senior business roles.

Paul Drechsler, the president of the CBI, said Alexander was a “brilliant leader” and “determined in making the case for diversity” during her tenure in the role between 2009 and 2011.

He said: “More than that, people will remember Helen for being a great listener with a thoughtful sense of humour. She will be greatly missed by me and by everyone who knew her, both in the UK and beyond.

“My thoughts and the thoughts of those past and present at the CBI will be with her family at this very sad time.”

Among her many roles, Oxford-educated Alexander was a non-executive director of PA Group, parent company of the Press Association, and at BT Group and Huawei UK.

The Economist described her as “self-effacing but a world-class networker”, and said that business had “no better ambassador”.

“Her success owed much to a leadership style that lacked fireworks and did not seek fame, but deserved more recognition, for both its humanity and effectiveness,” the newspaper said in an article on its website.

“Helen relied on a quiet wisdom: listening not lecturing. No name was ever forgotten, no thoughtful personal gesture was too small.”

Alexander, who was married with three children, had been fighting cancer for several years.

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