Karen S. Carter is about to make history. On July 1, she will become the chief executive officer of Dow Inc., stepping into the role after serving as the company’s chief operating officer and becoming the first Black woman to lead the 126 year old chemical giant in its entire history. It is the kind of milestone that resonates far beyond a single corporate announcement.
Carter’s path to the top job at one of the world’s largest materials science companies is rooted in nearly three decades of dedication to the organization she joined as a young graduate. She arrived at Dow in 1994 after completing her education at Howard University and DePaul University, entering an industry where Black women were rarely seen and even more rarely promoted. What followed was a career built through operations, sales, marketing and human resources, eventually extending to international leadership responsibilities across the Asia Pacific region. Before being named COO, she oversaw the company’s largest division, a role that tested and proved her ability to manage complexity at scale.
A place among a small and powerful group
With this appointment, Carter joins a still small but growing circle of women running Fortune 500 companies. Only 55 women currently hold CEO positions among those companies, and once Carter assumes the role, she will be one of just two Black women in that group. The numbers underscore both how far corporate America has come and how far it still has to go. Black women make up nearly 7 percent of the U.S. population, yet their presence in executive leadership at major companies remains disproportionately limited.
Carter’s elevation at Dow is meaningful precisely because it did not happen overnight or through a side door. She built her standing over 30 years inside the same organization, accumulating the kind of institutional knowledge and operational credibility that tends to carry real weight when a board selects its next leader.
What she is stepping into
The timing of Carter’s appointment comes with real challenges attached. Dow is navigating declining demand across several of its core industries, increased scrutiny from investors and a broader set of economic pressures that have made the environment difficult for companies in the plastics and chemicals space. Regulators and consumers alike have intensified their focus on the industry, adding another layer of complexity to an already demanding moment.
None of that appears to have dimmed Carter’s commitment to the work ahead. She has spoken about her intention to accelerate Dow’s transformation and to set a new standard for competitive performance, with a focus on delivering reliable solutions for customers while building long-term value for employees and shareholders.
A company whose reach is larger than its name recognition
Dow may not be a brand that most people think about by name, but its products touch daily life in ways that are hard to overstate. From food packaging and construction materials to consumer electronics, the company’s output is woven into the infrastructure of modern life. In 2025, Dow reported approximately $40 billion in sales and employs tens of thousands of people across the globe. The person leading that organization carries enormous responsibility, and Carter will carry it as a first.
Why her story reaches beyond the boardroom
For many people watching this appointment, the significance is personal. Aspiring leaders, particularly women of color navigating industries that have not always made room for them, will see in Carter’s story something concrete and worth holding onto. She did not arrive at the top of Dow Inc. through a shortcut. She stayed, she grew, she led and she earned it.
That is the kind of representation that tends to matter most not a token appointment, but a 30 year career culminating in the highest office of a Fortune 500 company. As Carter prepares to take the helm on July 1, the story she is writing is already bigger than Dow.

