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President Appoints
Bank of America’s Gordon to NSTAC
Washington
D.C. October 24, 2008 - President George W. Bush yesterday
announced his intent to appoint Marc D. Gordon, Chief Technology
Officer for Bank of America, to the President’s National Security
Telecommunications Advisory Committee (NSTAC).
Gordon replaces Donald J. Obert, who served on the
NSTAC for over seven years. President Bush appointed to the NSTAC
on July 9, 2001 – one of nine senior communications executives
named to NSTAC that day.
As Chief Technology Officer and a member of the bank’s
management operating committee, Gordon leads teams that deliver
on strategic business, technology and innovation priorities focused
on producing profitable growth across the company. Gordon has direct
responsibility for the following global teams:
- Enterprise Technology Strategy and Architecture
- Technology Infrastructure
- Information Security and Business Continuity
- Shared Information and Analytics platforms
- Enterprise Applications
- Global Delivery for both Technology and Operations
Gordon’s combined groups include more
than 28,000 teammates, span more than 35 cities in 10 countries
and represent an operating budget in excess of $4 billion.
He joined Bank of America in August 2004 and
served as the Chief Information Officer (CIO) for Consumer and Corporate
Staff Technology until June 2008. In that role, he partnered with
multiple lines of business to deliver technology solutions that
achieved business growth, cost efficiency and customer satisfaction
goals.
He has extensive retail industry experience
from leadership positions with Best Buy, West Marine Products and
The Timberland Company. Gordon joined the bank from Best Buy, a
consumer electronics and entertainment company with 2004 revenues
of $24 billion. During his six years at Best Buy, he served as executive
vice president of Supply Chain and CIO and was a member of the operating
committee. He also has 10 years of consulting experience in technology
and business operations, including five years with Accenture.
Gordon earned his bachelor’s degree in
economics from Colby College in Waterville, Maine and his master’s
degree in information systems from the Sloan School of Management
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge,
Mass. He currently serves on the board of directors of PACER, a
national organization that works to improve the lives of children
with disabilities and their parents.
President Ronald Reagan created the NSTAC by
Executive Order
12382 in September 1982. Composed of up to 30 industry chief
executives representing the major communications and network service
providers and information technology, finance, and aerospace companies,
the NSTAC provides industry-based advice and expertise to the President
on issues and problems related to implementing national security
and emergency preparedness (NS/EP) communications policy.
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