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Bruce S. Gordon

 
Black Biography: Bruce S. Gordon

business executive; association executive

Personal Information

Born on February 15, 1946, in Camden, NJ; son of Walter (a teacher) and Violet (a teacher) Gordon; married Genie Alston, February 20, 1970 (divorced); married Tawana Tibbs; children: Taurin (from first marriage)
Education: Gettysburg College, BA, 1968; Bell Advance Management program, University of Illinois, 1981; Wharton Executive Management program, University of Pennsylvania; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, MS, 1988.
Memberships: Alliance of Black Managers; Toastmasters International; Urban League, director, 1984-86; Inroads of Philadelphia, United Negro College Fund Telethon, 1985-86; NAACP.

Career

Bell of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, held various positions, 1968-85, including general manager for marketing and sales, 1985, vice president for marketing, 1988-93; Bell Atlantic Network Services, group president for retail, 1993-2000; retail markets group president for Verizon Communications, New York, NY, 2000-2003; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), president and CEO, 2005-.

Life's Work

Bruce S. Gordon's appointment in 2005 as president and CEO of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the oldest civil rights organization in the United States, caught many by surprise. Though Gordon had long been involved in civil rights issues, including the Urban League and the United Negro College Fund, he had built his reputation in the world of business. Gordon had enjoyed a long career in the telephone business and his expertise helped make his longtime employer, Verizon Communications, one of the most successful companies in the communications industry. As president of the retail markets group for the largest phone company in the United States, Gordon worked to keep Verizon's customers from straying in a highly competitive field. In 2002 he was named one of Fortune magazine's "50 Most Powerful Black Executives." Verizon's chief executive officer, Ivan Seidenberg, told Black Enterprise that Gordon was "an extraordinary executive whose marketing instincts and skills are unsurpassed." Gordon retired from Verizon in 2003. In a news release on the NAACP Web site announcing his appointment, Gordon said: "My goal as president will be to build on the legacy of this organization, to help it continue adapting to this new reality, and to extend its reach and influence to more of our youth, to more people of color, and to more leaders in the academic, business and political worlds."

Born on February 15, 1946, Gordon grew up in Camden, New Jersey, in a strict household headed by two educators. He studied at Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania, where he also played wide receiver on its football team. Gordon wanted to live in the city, and after his graduation in 1968 he applied for a management trainee post with the local phone company in Philadelphia. He accepted an offer from Bell of Pennsylvania--though he had no desire to make a career there, he told Nadirah Sabir, another writer for Black Enterprise. He explained, "I had this fear that if I stayed, I would be doing the same job my entire life."

At the time, Bell of Pennsylvania was part of the government-supervised telephone industry, which operated much like a public utility; there was one company providing the service to consumers, and its rates were regulated. But Gordon told Hayes, "Soon after I came into the Bell system, there were talks to convert the monopoly into a competitive business. The whole energy level picked up." Gordon ended his management training by accepting a job as a business office manager in 1970. He also fulfilled his political interests by writing a weekly column for a suburban Philadelphia paper, on subjects that often touched on some of the more contentious race issues of the day. At one point, he even considered leaving Bell in order to run an alternative urban school in Philadelphia, although he changed his mind just before handing in his resignation. "I wasn't a traditional person," he described himself at the time to Hayes. "Being a child of the '60s, I had a natural resistance to the status quo."

Gordon's determined personality almost ended his career in its infancy. There was a rumor that he was going to be fired, but a sales general manager and friend of Gordon's at Bell stepped in and requested that he be transferred to the sales department. Gordon told Hayes in Black Enterprise that his mentor "was Jewish and felt that he had also been a victim of discrimination. He liked that I was a black guy who had a lot to say about the business, and we connected on those terms." Gordon spent two years as a marketing sales manager before becoming a personnel supervisor in 1974. His career advanced quickly, and he held various management positions over the next decade, eventually becoming general manager for marketing and sales in 1985. In the interim, Bell of Pennsylvania was undergoing a transformation. Under existing anti-trust laws, its parent company, AT&T, had been ordered to dissolve its local and long-distance phone companies, and in 1985 the deregulation resulted in the creation of seven regional "Bell" phone companies. The former Bell of Pennsylvania became the Bell Atlantic Corporation.

Bell Atlantic provided phone service for some 12 million customers from New Jersey to Maryland, and Gordon's keen business sense fit well with the new era. The phone company was suddenly forced to compete for customers, and Gordon worked with those under him in order to set and meet goals. After he became vice president for marketing in 1988, he was able to bring about even greater changes. He initiated retail kiosks and greatly improved customer service--once a thorny problem for AT&T/Bell. For example, research showed that the employees in Bell Atlantic's call center who were picking up only 70 percent of customer service or repair calls in the first 20 seconds. Gordon set a goal of 90 percent within that time frame, and looked for ways to meet the goal without simply adding more employees. He found that call center employees were often away at seminars, or just not at their desks. Within two months, Bell Atlantic hit the Gordon's mark.

But Gordon soon realized that the root of the problem might go even deeper. "I had to decide whether the people who got us to this point in history could take us forward," he told Sabir in the Black Enterprise interview. Gordon won approval to restructure the way in which employees could advance within the company. He announced that all positions were open to every employee, and that all had to compete for such jobs, which resulted in a 20 percent turnover of staff. Gordon also worked hard to ensure that he was personally as accessible as everyone else. He turned down a private manager's office, preferring to work on the same floor as many of his employees, because "information gets filtered when you're up there, and you cut yourself off," he told Black Enterprise.

Gordon was named group president for retail markets in 1993, and four years later was put in charge of a historic changeover, when Bell Atlantic and NYNEX, the New York and New England phone system, merged. The $26-billion deal gave Bell Atlantic millions of new customers from New York to Maine, and made it the number two telecommunications company in the United States. Gordon headed up the all-important integration team for the new merger, which entailed changing the logos on phone booths, buildings, directories, and even some 28 million monthly statements mailed to customers. It was a swift, successful changeover, according to focus-group studies, and helped earn Gordon Black Enterprise's Executive of the Year honor in 1998.

In June of 2000, Bell Atlantic merged with GTE, and both names were jettisoned in favor of "Verizon." Gordon remained as president of the retail markets group as the company grew, and continued to work within the company to help others. He founded a mentoring and networking group for African Americans at Verizon before retiring from the company in December of 2003.

His retirement, however, was short-lived, for in 2005 Gordon was tapped to head the NAACP. Once a strong force for civil rights in American, the organization that had been steadily diminishing in size and influence for years. Gordon's appointment signified to many observers that the organization's board was looking for someone to lead the group in a new direction. In an interview published on the PBS Online NewsHour Web site, Gordon explained that he was selected because of his business acumen and his proven record at solving tough problems. Describing his goals, the tough-talking Gordon proclaimed, "I intend to go where the trouble is. That says to me once we identify a problem, we will find its solution. If its solution is embedded in political intervention, so be it. If its solution is embedded in building relationships with Wall Street and corporate America, so be it. I'll find the trouble, I'll go to the trouble, we'll find the solution, and utilize any and every mechanism necessary to solve those problems." With his firm leadership and his proven record of business success, Gordon is certain to bring major changes to the NAACP.

Awards

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Alfred P. Sloan fellow, 1987; Black Enterprise magazine, Executive of the Year, 1998; Fortune magazine, named one of the "50 Most Powerful Black Executives," 2002 .

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Advertising Age, October 8, 2001, p. S27.
  • Black Enterprise, May 1995, p. 55; September 1998, p. 84.
  • Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ), July 11, 2002, p. 38.
  • USA Today, June 25, 2005.
On-line
  • "Conversation: Bruce Gordon," Online NewsHour, www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/race_relations/july-dec05/gordon_7-4.html (August 15, 2005).
  • "Key Executives," Verizon, http://newscenter.verizon.com/speeches/bio_gordon.vtml (August 15, 2005).
  • "NAACP Board Overwhelmingly Selects Bruce S. Gordon Next President, CEO," NAACP, www.naacp.org/news/2005/2005-06-25.html (August 15, 2005).

— Ashyia Henderson and Tom Pendergast

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Bruce S. Gordon
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Gordon, Bruce S., 1946-, African-American business executive and civil-rights leader, b. Camden, N.J.; grad. Gettysburg College (B.A., 1968), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.S., 1988). Gordon entered the telecommunications industry as a management trainee with Bell of Pennsylvania in 1968 and retired from the business in 2003 as a senior executive with Verizon. In 2005 he was appointed president and chief executive officer of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The first business executive to head the organization, he pledged to press for greater economic equality for African Americans, but differences with the NAACP's board over the role the organization should play led Gordon to resign in 2007.
Wikipedia: Bruce S. Gordon
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Bruce Scott Gordon (born February 15, 1946) is an African American business executive who spent most of his career with Verizon and currently serves as a corporate director of CBS and Tyco International. He was selected in June 2005 to head the NAACP, a major American civil rights organization. [1] Gordon served in that position until March 2007.

Career

Born in Camden, New Jersey, Gordon's parents were both active in the civil rights movement. A 1968 graduate of Gettysburg College, where he was a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity, and a 1988 Master's degree in Management (M.B.A.) graduate of the Sloan Fellows program of the MIT Sloan School of Management. Gordon's professional career began at Bell of Pennsylvania, where he rose in corporate management to become the Head of the Retail Markets Division of Verizon upon his retirement in December 2003. Other Verizon executives have credited him with helping to promote diversity and a corporate culture based on customer service at the telecom company.

Gordon is a member of the boards of CBS and Tyco International, Ltd.; a trustee of the Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation, The Barnes Foundation, UNICEF, National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, and Commission on African American Men and Boys; the chair of Chancellor's Advisory Board on Student Motivation in the New York Public School System; and a member of the Executive Leadership Council. Gordon previously served on the boards of Southern Company, Office Depot, Best Foods, Infinity Broadcasting and The Bartech Group. He was also a trustee of Gettysburg College and Lincoln Center. The American Advertising Federation inducted him into the Advertising Hall of Fame, the industry’s most prestigious honor, in March 2007. Ebony magazine named him one of its “100 Most Influential Black Americans and Organization Leaders” in May 2006. He was ranked #6 on Fortune magazine’s list of the “50 Most Powerful Black Executives” in July 2002. Black Enterprise magazine named him executive of the year in 1998.

NAACP

Gordon's selection as NAACP president on 25 June 2005 was widely regarded as unusual — most of the organization's past presidents have been prominent figures in politics, religion, or the civil rights movement before holding the office. The only candidate seriously considered by the organization's board, he was approved by a unanimous vote and was confirmed at the July 2005 NAACP convention. He succeeded Kweisi Mfume, who resigned his post as NAACP president in late 2004.

President George W. Bush made his first appearance at the NAACP on July 20, 2006, half-way through his second term. [2] After having snubbed the organization for most of his presidency, it was Gordon's "moderate" political views that led Bush to acquiesce to the appearance, according to White House spokesman Tony Snow.

Citing strain with the board, Gordon resigned in March 2007. He stated "I did not step into the role to be a caretaker, to be dictated to," Gordon said. "I stepped into the role to understand as best I could the needs of the African American community and then to propose strategies and policies and programs and practices that could improve conditions for African Americans…. The things I had in mind were not consistent with what some — unfortunately, too many — on the board had in mind." [3]

References

  1. ^ Texeira, Erin (June 25, 2005). NAACP board names Bruce Gordon president.
  2. ^ President Bush Addresses NAACP Annual Convention
  3. ^ Associated Press (March 4, 2007). Bruce Gordon Resigns as N.A.A.C.P. President. New York Times

 
 

 

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Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bruce S. Gordon" Read more

 

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