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This year, Fortune selected her as number one in their list of the world's most powerful women.
Hewson got her start at the aerospace and defense company in 1983 as a senior industrial engineer.
Marillyn Hewson is the most powerful woman in the world right now.
At least, that's what Fortune magazine has dubbed the Lockheed Martin CEO and chairman. The magazine credited Hewson with having placed the aerospace and defense company in "the sweet spot to cater to the modern military's needs" and with "leading the charge to develop hypersonic weapons."
And Hewson is compensated in the millions for her efforts. The CEO's total net worth isn't immediately clear, but according to the Washington Business Journal, her total compensation in 2017 was $22.87 million. That's an 11.15% increase from her overall compensation in 2016, which was reported at $20.57 million.
Her mother Mary was left to care for five kids. Hewson wrote in Politico that her mother's resilience "taught me everything I needed to know about leadership."
Hewson wrote that she grew up helping to care for her younger siblings, doing odd jobs in their apartment building, and grocery shopping for their mom.
Hewson credited her time at the university with prepping her for "the challenges and opportunities I've encountered throughout my career — from the day I joined the company as an industrial engineer to my current role as CEO."
She also met her future husband James while studying at the University of Alabama. Over the course of Hewson's rise at Lockheed Martin, the couple would decide that James would remain at home with their two sons.
Hewson joined Lockheed Martin in 1983, when she began working as a senior industrial engineer.
Over the course of her career, Hewson worked in four of Lockheed Martin's five business segments: information systems and global solutions, missiles and fire controls, mission systems and trainings, aeronautics, and space systems.
Fortune reported that the longtime executive assumed that the role would be the culmination of her time with the company — but a scandal changed the course of her career at the company.
Incoming Lockheed Martin CEO Christopher Kubasik resigned after an investigation revealed that he had an inappropriate relationship with a female subordinate.
That's how Hewson became Lockheed Martin's COO and, subsequently, CEO in quick succession. "Nineteen was a quick turn," she told Fortune, referring to the fact that becoming COO and then CEO represented her 19th and 20th jobs within the organization.
Today, Lockheed Martin is considered the "Pentagon's top weapons supplier," according to Fortune. The company's market cap is currently $98.86 billion.
Lockheed Martin's website guarantees that the firm's 100,000 or so employees are focused on everything from "protecting citizens" to "advancing the boundaries of science."
Hewson has donated to the campaigns of politicians from both major US parties over the years. And US President Donald Trump praised her as "the leading women's business executive in this country, according to many."
Hewson wrote on LinkedIn that over the course of her career, she's learned that leadership skills are "perishable." She wrote that true leadership "... takes a devotion to listening and learning to build and maintain leadership skills and effectiveness."