From a longish piece in Fortune on Frank Bisignano:
... [Bisignano] rebuilt Citigroup’s decimated back-office operations from the ashes of 9/11, repaired Washington Mutual’s stricken subprime book after the 2007 housing meltdown as Jamie Dimon’s fixer at JPMorgan Chase, and transformed a lumbering warhorse that was one of the worst investments KKR ever made into a potent money spinner that he merged into Fiserv, then drove the combo to reign as America’s largest non-bank handler of credit card payments to retailers, restaurants and other merchants, ferrying $2.5 trillion in payments per day. ...
Bisignano built his career bulldozing forward to mend the most basic but unsexiest of businesses. The Brooklyn-born Bisignano’s father labored as a career customs agent. His mom was a 105-pound dynamo who began as a bookkeeper at a stevedoring outfit and rose to run the whole waterfront operation. Bisignano went to Baker College, a liberal arts school in Kansas, where he majored in business and won trophies as a nationally ranked bowler. [The bowling team at Baker College isn't exactly the same as the fencing team at Yale. How did an Italian-American kid from New York City end up at a small college in Kansas anyway? By the way, note that there is no mention of an M.B.A. which is surprising for someone with Bisignano's work history.] In 1994, Jamie Dimon hired Bisignano at Travelers to run operations at Smith Barney. Bisignano unwound leading a zany softball team of Italian Americans who dubbed themselves “the Paisanos” and sported floppy hats like pizza makers on the diamond. ...
Bisignano contracted throat cancer [sometime after 9/11], a condition he likely ascribes to the toxic soot of 9/11 [He was working in the area at the time]. Every morning, he’d undergo radiation in the New York area, and right afterward head to the airport to fly cross-country for a day of work on the West Coast. Then he’d jet back overnight and take radiation again in the morning. Bisignano survived surgery, and his trademark gravelly voice is a legacy of that illness. ...
Bisignano created probably the most sumptuous corporate hub in Manhattan by purchasing and totally renovating 1 Broadway, a Queen Anne–style architectural marvel dating from 1745 that overlooks Bowling Green and the New York Harbor. ...
Read the whole thing. There's the inevitable assumption that someone with a successful business background will "turn around" Social Security, which causes my eyes to roll, but also a good deal of useful information about the man.
4 comments:
"There's the inevitable assumption that someone with a successful business background will "turn around" Social Security,"
ME: I agree. I don't think there is really any empirical evidence of that in the entire public ADMIN literature.. yet they continue with dogma claims... what is the point of knowledge at this point.
I read the article yesterday, including speculation that the incoming COSS will ask for access to agency "payment systems". This is his background.
More disturbing is an article on Reuters just out that Elon's people have virtually taken over OPM.
I saw that too. It's disturbing, to say the very least!
Whoever wrote that article needs to hop off Frank's lap before they publish next time. It's embarrassing.
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