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Seidenberg was first employed in 1966 as cable splice assistant at the New York Telephone, one of [[AT&T]]'s baby bells. His employment with the company was interrupted when he was drafted to the United States Army for two years during the war in Vietnam. He came home in the U.S as a decorated soldier after being wounded during a battle in Khe Sanh Vietnam. After his service in the military, he returned to his job at New York Telephone. He was promoted and assumed different engineering positions within the company.<ref>[http://www.referenceforbusiness.com/biography/S-Z/Seidenberg-Ivan-G-1946.html#b Ivan G. Seidenberg 1946— Biography - Starting from the Ground Up, Winners Never Quit]</ref> In 1981, Seidenberg became  assistant vice-president for marketing. In 1983, he assumed the position of vice-president for federal relations <ref>[http://www.notablebiographies.com/newsmakers2/2004-Q-Z/Seidenberg-Ivan.html Encyclopedia of World Biography-Ivan Seidenberg]</ref>
Seidenberg was first employed in 1966 as cable splice assistant at the New York Telephone, one of [[AT&T]]'s baby bells. His employment with the company was interrupted when he was drafted to the United States Army for two years during the war in Vietnam. He came home in the U.S as a decorated soldier after being wounded during a battle in Khe Sanh Vietnam. After his service in the military, he returned to his job at New York Telephone. He was promoted and assumed different engineering positions within the company.<ref>[http://www.referenceforbusiness.com/biography/S-Z/Seidenberg-Ivan-G-1946.html#b Ivan G. Seidenberg 1946— Biography - Starting from the Ground Up, Winners Never Quit]</ref> In 1981, Seidenberg became  assistant vice-president for marketing. In 1983, he assumed the position of vice-president for federal relations <ref>[http://www.notablebiographies.com/newsmakers2/2004-Q-Z/Seidenberg-Ivan.html Encyclopedia of World Biography-Ivan Seidenberg]</ref>


After the AT&T Divestiture, NYNEX was formed after the merger of New York Telephone and New England Telephone & Telegraph Company.<ref>[http://transition.fcc.gov/wcb/armis/carrier_filing_history/COSA_History/nxtr.htm NYNEX Corporation]</ref> Seidenberg joined NYNEX as vice-president for external affairs. In 1995, he became Chairman and CEO of the company.<ref>[http://articles.latimes.com/1996-04-22/business/fi-61448_1_nynex-chairman Profile / Ivan G. Seidenberg: For Nynex Chairman, an Unusual Route to the Top]</ref>
After the AT&T Divestiture, NYNEX was formed after the merger of New York Telephone and New England Telephone & Telegraph Company.<ref>[http://transition.fcc.gov/wcb/armis/carrier_filing_history/COSA_History/nxtr.htm NYNEX Corporation]</ref> Seidenberg joined NYNEX as vice-president for external affairs. In 1995, he became Chairman and CEO of the company.<ref>[http://articles.latimes.com/1996-04-22/business/fi-61448_1_nynex-chairman Profile / Ivan G. Seidenberg: For Nynex Chairman, an Unusual Route to the Top]</ref> In 1997, NYNEX merged with Bell Atlantic. He was also instrumental in the Bell Atlantic and GTE merger which resulted in the formation of Verizon Telecommunications in 2000. Seidenberg became co-CEO and President of the company with Charles Lee until 2002.<ref>[http://newscenter.verizon.com/press-releases/verizon/2000/page-29759986.html Ivan Seidenberg, Verizon Co-CEO and President to Appear at National Press Club]</ref> He became the sole CEO and Chairman of Verizon in 2004. In August 2011, Seidenberg turned over the CEO position to Lowell Mac Adam but remained Chairman of the company.<ref>[http://techcrunch.com/2011/07/22/verizon-ceo-ivan-seidenberg-steps-down-coo-lowell-mcadam-steps-up/ Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg Steps Down, COO Lowell McAdam Steps Up]</ref>


==References==
==References==
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Revision as of 20:15, 8 November 2011


Country: USA

Ivan G. Seidenberg is the Chairman of Verizon Communications, Inc. since 2004 up to present. He is also the Chairman of Busniess Roundtable, an organization comprised of Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) of top companies in the United States.[1] He also serves as one of the Presidential Advisers under the Presidential Export Council under President Barack Obama's administration. He received his appointment from the President to promote U.S. exports, jobs and growth on June of 2010.[2]

Personal Information

Seidenberg was born on December 10, 1946, in New York City, New York. His parents were Howard and Kitty Seidenberg. He is married to Phyllis A. Maisel and they two children.[3]

Education

Seidenberg attended evening classes at the City University of New York. He received his Bachelors Degree in Mathematics in 1972. He earned his Masters Degree in Business Administration at Pace University in 1980.[4]

Career History

Seidenberg was first employed in 1966 as cable splice assistant at the New York Telephone, one of AT&T's baby bells. His employment with the company was interrupted when he was drafted to the United States Army for two years during the war in Vietnam. He came home in the U.S as a decorated soldier after being wounded during a battle in Khe Sanh Vietnam. After his service in the military, he returned to his job at New York Telephone. He was promoted and assumed different engineering positions within the company.[5] In 1981, Seidenberg became assistant vice-president for marketing. In 1983, he assumed the position of vice-president for federal relations [6]

After the AT&T Divestiture, NYNEX was formed after the merger of New York Telephone and New England Telephone & Telegraph Company.[7] Seidenberg joined NYNEX as vice-president for external affairs. In 1995, he became Chairman and CEO of the company.[8] In 1997, NYNEX merged with Bell Atlantic. He was also instrumental in the Bell Atlantic and GTE merger which resulted in the formation of Verizon Telecommunications in 2000. Seidenberg became co-CEO and President of the company with Charles Lee until 2002.[9] He became the sole CEO and Chairman of Verizon in 2004. In August 2011, Seidenberg turned over the CEO position to Lowell Mac Adam but remained Chairman of the company.[10]

References