CEO Search Committee

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The ICANN CEO Search Committee was formed following Rod Beckstrom's August 2011 announcement that he will not continue as CEO past the fulfillment of his term, completed on 1 July 2012. The topic of CEO succession planning was first discussed at a Board meeting on 17 September 2011, where they directed the Board Governance Committee to appoint members to a CEO Search Process Management Work Committee.[1] The committee is contracting with search firm Odgers Berndtson in Brussels, who will be handling application inquiries and expressions of interest.[2] In January 2012, ICANN began openly advertising the position in places such as The Economist.[3]

The committee expects to announce their CEO selection in May, with the CEO taking office at the close of Beckstrom's term, on July 1, 2012.[4]

Members

At a Board meeting on 11 October 2011, the BGC announced the following members, which were approved by the Board:

Criteria

At ICANN 42 in Dakar, the committee held an open session to consult with the community on the process and criteria used for selection of the next CEO. They also set up an email address to receive input, with a deadline of November 15th 2011.[6]

Public Comments

Final Criteria

The job description can be found here. The criteria decided upon by the search committee was divided into four categories: Professional, Personal, Technical, and The Internet Governance Ecosystem. The following are examples of each facet:

Professional

  • Public, corporate, or academic service at a high international level;
  • Experience working with different countries or cultures;
  • Track record of achieving results.

Personal

  • Consensus builder, motivator, persuader;
  • Innovative;
  • Empathetic, especially to those with differing backgrounds;
  • Earns respect and generates trust;
  • Multicultural, skilled at language, practiced communicator and public speaker.

Technical

  • Knowledge of Internet architecture;
  • Familiarity with ICANN community and system, including registries, registrars, ICANN's Multistakeholder Model and policy development processes;
  • Understanding of the domain name market.

The Internet Governance Ecosystem

  • Understand the institutions involved in the functioning of the Internet, including but not limited to IETF, ISOC, and W3C;
  • Knowledge of relevant government stakeholders.[7]

The full list of criteria can be found here. It is not expected that every candidate will meet every criteria.

References