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Fadi attended [[ICANN 44]] in Prague, Czech Republic, and gave a speech during the Opening Ceremony.<ref>[http://www.thedomains.com/2012/06/25/new-icann-ceo-fadi-chehade-impresses-in-opening-session-the-internet-is-the-greatest-public-gift/ New ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade Impresses In Opening Session: “The Internet is the Greatest Public Gift”, thedomains.com]</ref>
Fadi attended [[ICANN 44]] in Prague, Czech Republic, and gave a speech during the Opening Ceremony.<ref>[http://www.thedomains.com/2012/06/25/new-icann-ceo-fadi-chehade-impresses-in-opening-session-the-internet-is-the-greatest-public-gift/ New ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade Impresses In Opening Session: “The Internet is the Greatest Public Gift”, thedomains.com]</ref>
==ICANN==
==CEO Search==
===ICANN 44 Prague==
Mr. Chehadé first introduced himself when he was still the "incoming" CEO at [[ICANN 44]] in Prague. That meeting marked the last conference of outgoing CEO [[Rod Beckstrom]], who officially left the organization a few days later.<ref>[http://www.dynadot.com/community/blog/2012/06/meet-icann-new-ceo.html Meet ICANN New CEO, DynaDot.com]</ref> The ICANN 44 was also adressed by interim CEO [[Akram Atallah]], who mostly promised to steer the organization, focusing on [[New gTLD Program|new gTLDs]], and prepare it for Mr. Chehadé without creating new disturbances or distractions. Mr. Chehadé stresses that he would asses the needs of ICANN from the outside over the coming months so that he can facilitate genuine consensus within the ICANN community. He promised to manage [[ICANN Staff]] with a very decision-driven mindset. He stressed two observations he had already made; the first is that ICANN is an international organization, and that it must strive to be more international. The second observation was that all his work will be mute if the organization does not deliver "excellence." At the close of his speech he made 3 pledges, they are:
# "I will listen"
# "I will be very transparent".."super transparent"..."extra transparent"
# "I will make all my decisions for the public interest"<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjt2mCinmbg ICANN 44 Video, Youtube.com]</ref>


==Career History==
==Career History==
Chehadé has more than 25 years of experience in founding and leading progressive Internet businesses. He served most recently as the CEO of Vocado (October 2010 - October 2012), a firm providing cloud-based software to the administrations of educational institutions. Prior, he was CEO of CoreObjects Software (April 2009 – August 2010), a leader in new product software development services for both large and growing companies. In his time there, he oversaw the company's growth to more than 400 employees and its acquisition by Symphony Services. From February 2006 until March 2009, Fadi served as the General Manager of [[IBM]]'s Global Technology Services in the Middle East and North Africa Department, following IBM's acquisition of his company, Viacore Inc. He founded Viacore, a B2B process integration hub, in February, 2000. From February 1998 until February 2000, he served as the Founder and CEO of RosettaNet, a non-profit multi-stakeholder company that lead major international corporations including IBM, Microsoft, HP, Nokia, and Oracle, to collaborate on B2B standards. From July 1996 until February 1998, Chehadé served as the Vice President of Ingram Micro. In 1988, he founded Connectica Inc. and served as its CEO for 8 years. He began his career as a Systems Engineer at [[AT&T]]'s Bell Labs.<ref>[http://www.icann.org/en/groups/board/chehade-en.htm Fadi Chehadé | President and CEO, icann.org]</ref><ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/in/fadichehade LinkedIn]</ref>
Chehadé has more than 25 years of experience in founding and leading progressive Internet businesses. He served most recently as the CEO of Vocado (October 2010 - October 2012), a firm providing cloud-based software to the administrations of educational institutions. Prior, he was CEO of CoreObjects Software (April 2009 – August 2010), a leader in new product software development services for both large and growing companies. In his time there, he oversaw the company's growth to more than 400 employees and its acquisition by Symphony Services. From February 2006 until March 2009, Fadi served as the General Manager of [[IBM]]'s Global Technology Services in the Middle East and North Africa Department, following IBM's acquisition of his company, Viacore Inc. He founded Viacore, a B2B process integration hub, in February, 2000. From February 1998 until February 2000, he served as the Founder and CEO of RosettaNet, a non-profit multi-stakeholder company that lead major international corporations including IBM, Microsoft, HP, Nokia, and Oracle, to collaborate on B2B standards. From July 1996 until February 1998, Chehadé served as the Vice President of Ingram Micro. In 1988, he founded Connectica Inc. and served as its CEO for 8 years. He began his career as a Systems Engineer at [[AT&T]]'s Bell Labs.<ref>[http://www.icann.org/en/groups/board/chehade-en.htm Fadi Chehadé | President and CEO, icann.org]</ref><ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/in/fadichehade LinkedIn]</ref>


==Education==
===Education===
Chehadé received his M.S. in Engineering Management from Stanford University in 1986 and his B.S. in Computer Science from Polytechnic University in 1985.<ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/in/fadichehade LinkedIn]</ref> He speaks English, Arabic, French, and Italian.<ref>[http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-06-22/bio-information-on-new-icann-ceo-fadi-chehade Bio information on new ICANN CEO, Fadi Chehade, businessweek.com]</ref>
Chehadé received his M.S. in Engineering Management from Stanford University in 1986 and his B.S. in Computer Science from Polytechnic University in 1985.<ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/in/fadichehade LinkedIn]</ref> He speaks English, Arabic, French, and Italian.<ref>[http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-06-22/bio-information-on-new-icann-ceo-fadi-chehade Bio information on new ICANN CEO, Fadi Chehade, businessweek.com]</ref>
==Personal Background==
As Mr. Chehadé explains in his first speech to an ICANN conference, he was born in Beirut of  Egyptian parents who had lived in various parts of the world before they settled in Lebanon. His family is from a Coptic Christian minority in Egypt. In Beirut,  he attended a French Christian school, speaking French at school and Arabic afterwards, until at the age of 13 his father decided to send him to Damascus due to violent tensions and the Lebanese civil war. He arrived in the U.S. at the age of 18 without knowing any English; his first job, which he retained for 7 months, was peeling onions. During this time he was also attending school to learn English. Later, his tuition at Stanford was covered by a work-study agreement with his employer, [[AT&T]].


==Videos==
==Videos==

Revision as of 14:56, 13 September 2012

Country: USA
LinkedIn:    [fadichehade Fadi Chehadé]

Fadi Chehadé is the incoming President and CEO of ICANN. He is set to take over from the Interim CEO Akram Atallah on or before October 1, 2012.

Fadi attended ICANN 44 in Prague, Czech Republic, and gave a speech during the Opening Ceremony.[1]

ICANN

CEO Search

=ICANN 44 Prague

Mr. Chehadé first introduced himself when he was still the "incoming" CEO at ICANN 44 in Prague. That meeting marked the last conference of outgoing CEO Rod Beckstrom, who officially left the organization a few days later.[2] The ICANN 44 was also adressed by interim CEO Akram Atallah, who mostly promised to steer the organization, focusing on new gTLDs, and prepare it for Mr. Chehadé without creating new disturbances or distractions. Mr. Chehadé stresses that he would asses the needs of ICANN from the outside over the coming months so that he can facilitate genuine consensus within the ICANN community. He promised to manage ICANN Staff with a very decision-driven mindset. He stressed two observations he had already made; the first is that ICANN is an international organization, and that it must strive to be more international. The second observation was that all his work will be mute if the organization does not deliver "excellence." At the close of his speech he made 3 pledges, they are:

  1. "I will listen"
  2. "I will be very transparent".."super transparent"..."extra transparent"
  3. "I will make all my decisions for the public interest"[3]

Career History

Chehadé has more than 25 years of experience in founding and leading progressive Internet businesses. He served most recently as the CEO of Vocado (October 2010 - October 2012), a firm providing cloud-based software to the administrations of educational institutions. Prior, he was CEO of CoreObjects Software (April 2009 – August 2010), a leader in new product software development services for both large and growing companies. In his time there, he oversaw the company's growth to more than 400 employees and its acquisition by Symphony Services. From February 2006 until March 2009, Fadi served as the General Manager of IBM's Global Technology Services in the Middle East and North Africa Department, following IBM's acquisition of his company, Viacore Inc. He founded Viacore, a B2B process integration hub, in February, 2000. From February 1998 until February 2000, he served as the Founder and CEO of RosettaNet, a non-profit multi-stakeholder company that lead major international corporations including IBM, Microsoft, HP, Nokia, and Oracle, to collaborate on B2B standards. From July 1996 until February 1998, Chehadé served as the Vice President of Ingram Micro. In 1988, he founded Connectica Inc. and served as its CEO for 8 years. He began his career as a Systems Engineer at AT&T's Bell Labs.[4][5]

Education

Chehadé received his M.S. in Engineering Management from Stanford University in 1986 and his B.S. in Computer Science from Polytechnic University in 1985.[6] He speaks English, Arabic, French, and Italian.[7]

Personal Background

As Mr. Chehadé explains in his first speech to an ICANN conference, he was born in Beirut of Egyptian parents who had lived in various parts of the world before they settled in Lebanon. His family is from a Coptic Christian minority in Egypt. In Beirut, he attended a French Christian school, speaking French at school and Arabic afterwards, until at the age of 13 his father decided to send him to Damascus due to violent tensions and the Lebanese civil war. He arrived in the U.S. at the age of 18 without knowing any English; his first job, which he retained for 7 months, was peeling onions. During this time he was also attending school to learn English. Later, his tuition at Stanford was covered by a work-study agreement with his employer, AT&T.

Videos

<videoflash>rjt2mCinmbg</videoflash>

References