Who is the ceo of boeing company

-  Leanne Caret to retire; Ted Colbert named president and CEO, Boeing Defense, Space & Security

Stephanie Pope named president and CEO, Boeing Global Services

CHICAGO, March 28, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Boeing [NYSE: BA] today announced Ted Colbert as president and chief executive officer of its Defense, Space and Security business. Colbert succeeds Leanne Caret who is retiring following nearly 35 years of exceptional service with The Boeing Company. Stephanie Pope has been appointed as president and CEO of Boeing Global Services (BGS), succeeding Colbert.

"We are grateful for Leanne's dedicated service and I'd like to thank her for her outstanding contributions to our industry, our customers, our company and our employees over her extraordinary career at Boeing," said Dave Calhoun, Boeing President and CEO.

As president and CEO of Boeing Defense, Space and Security (BDS), Colbert will oversee all aspects of the company's business unit that provides technology, products and solutions for defense, government, space, intelligence, and security customers worldwide. BDS had 2021 revenue of $26 billion.

"Throughout his career, Ted Colbert has consistently brought technical excellence and strong and innovative leadership to every position he has held," said Calhoun. "Under his leadership, BGS has assembled an excellent leadership team focused on delivering safe and high-quality services for our defense and commercial customers. His leadership track record and current experience supporting the defense services portfolio ideally position Ted to lead BDS." 

As president and CEO of Boeing Global Services, Pope, who is currently Boeing Commercial Airplanes chief financial officer, will lead the company's business unit that provides aerospace services for commercial, government and aviation industry customers worldwide, focused on global supply chain and parts distribution, aircraft modifications and maintenance, digital solutions, aftermarket engineering, analytics and training. BGS had 2021 revenue of $16 billion. Prior to her assignment as BCA CFO, Pope was chief financial officer of BGS and was part of the business when it was established in 2017.

"Stephanie brings decades of wide-ranging business and financial leadership to her new role," said Calhoun. "Given her significant experience in all aspects of BGS, Stephanie's deep understanding of the global services portfolio since its inception and the needs of BGS customers will help accelerate this meaningful business."

Colbert and Pope's new assignments will be effective April 1. Until her retirement later this year, Caret will serve as executive vice president and senior advisor to the CEO, reporting to Calhoun, to support the leadership transition, business continuity and critical talent acquisition efforts.

Ted Colbert Biography

Ted Colbert joined Boeing in 2009 and has been serving as president and CEO of Boeing Global Services, where he has been responsible for leading the company's aerospace services development and delivery model for commercial, government and aviation industry customers worldwide, focusing on global supply chain and parts distribution, aircraft modifications and maintenance, digital solutions, aftermarket engineering, analytics and training. Prior to that role, he served as chief information officer (CIO) and senior vice president of Information Technology & Data Analytics. In 2022, The Black Engineer of the Year Awards (BEYA) named Colbert Black Engineer of the Year, the organization's top honor. Colbert completed the Dual Degree Engineering Program at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Morehouse College with degrees in Industrial and Systems Engineering and Interdisciplinary Science. Read his full bio.

Stephanie Pope Biography

Stephanie Pope has been serving as vice president and chief financial officer of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, where she has overseen the Finance organization, with responsibility for the financial management and strategic and long-range business planning at the business unit. Previously, Pope was vice president and chief financial officer of Boeing Global Services, overseeing all financial activities for the business unit since its founding in 2017. In more than two decades of service at Boeing, Pope has held a number of leadership positions of increasing responsibility at the business units, within programs and at the corporate level. Read her full bio.

Leanne Caret Biography

Leanne Caret has served as president and chief executive officer of Boeing Defense, Space & Security (BDS) since 2016.  Caret is a second-generation Boeing employee who started working for the company in 1988. Prior to her role overseeing BDS, she was president of the company's Global Services & Support organization, BDS chief financial officer, vice president and general manager of Vertical Lift, vice president of H-47 Programs, and general manager of Global Transport & Executive Systems. Fortune magazine named her to its Most Powerful Women list in 2021 for the fifth consecutive year. In addition to being a 2019 inductee of the Women in Aviation International Pioneer Hall of Fame, Caret is a fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society and an associate fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Read her full bio.

As a leading global aerospace company, Boeing develops, manufactures and services commercial airplanes, defense products and space systems for customers in more than 150 countries. As a top U.S. exporter, the company leverages the talents of a global supplier base to advance economic opportunity, sustainability and community impact. Boeing's diverse team is committed to innovating for the future and living the company's core values of safety, quality and integrity. Learn more at www.boeing.com.  

Contact         Boeing Communications

Incoming President and CEO of Boeing Defense, Space and Security business, Ted Colbert

AFP via Getty Images

Monday, Boeing announced that Ted Colbert has been named president and chief executive officer of its Defense, Space and Security business. This move will take effect on April 1. Colbert succeeds Leanne Caret who is retiring following nearly 35 years with Boeing. Colbert had been president and CEO of Boeing Global Services (BGS). Stephanie Pope has been appointed as his successor in that role.

Boeing’s Defense, Space and Security business provides military aircraft and network and space systems to customers around the world, and earned revenues of $26.5 billion in 2021. As such, this is the company’s largest business unit by revenue.

"Throughout his career, Ted Colbert has consistently brought technical excellence and strong and innovative leadership to every position he has held," said Boeing president and CEO Dave Calhoun. "Under his leadership, BGS has assembled an excellent leadership team focused on delivering safe and high-quality services for our defense and commercial customers. His leadership track record and current experience supporting the defense services portfolio ideally position Ted to lead BDS."

Colbert joined Boeing’s information technology department in 2009, rising to the role of chief information officer in 2013 and to the role of CIO and senior vice president of Information Technology & Data Analytics in 2016. It was in that role that Colbert won Forbes CIO Innovation Award in 2018 for the development of a digital flight deck. In May of 2021, Colbert joined the board of ADM, the $85 billion revenue multinational food processing and commodities trading corporation, as well.

Colbert’s expanded responsibilities from CIO to CIO-plus to beyond CIO to board level executive has him in an exclusive but growing club of former CIOs who have expanded their responsibilities.

Peter High is President of Metis Strategy, a business and IT advisory firm. He has written two bestselling books, and his third, Getting to Nimble, was recently released. He also moderates the Technovation podcast series and speaks at conferences around the world. Follow him on Twitter @PeterAHigh.

In December 2019, reeling from the growing fallout of two crashes that killed 346 people, Boeing fired its CEO, Dennis Muilenburg. While he departed in disgrace, he was hardly frog-marched to the exit: The former chief will receive $60 million in stock options and pension benefits. And his time in the corporate wilderness hasn’t been long. Two years after the crashes of Lion Air Flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, both of which involved Boeing’s 737 Max planes, Muilenburg is back, running a vaguely defined holding company in the aerospace and defense industry.

Muilenburg is now the CEO and chairman of New Vista Acquisition Corp. The new firm, which went public on Wednesday after raising $240 million, is a special-purpose acquisition company, or SPAC: a kind of blank-check financial vehicle that’s become a popular method for companies—including some run by sports and Hollywood celebrities—to facilitate mergers and go public without much of the scrutiny associated with an initial public offering. In this role, Muilenburg will be largely free from shareholder oversight—to the dismay of crash victims’ families.

“Dennis Muilenburg should be defending himself in criminal court right now as the lead conspirator in corporate homicide in two plane crashes,” said Michael Stumo, whose daughter, Samya Rose Stumo, 24, died in the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

Last month, the Department of Justice’s fraud division announced a $2.5 billion settlement with Boeing, in which the company admitted that two of its employees had deceived the Federal Aviation Administration about critical software in the 737 Max that helps to avert crashes. Thus ended the government’s criminal investigation into the two deadly crashes—and the chain of corporate, bureaucratic, and technical malfeasance that led to them. In the eyes of victims’ families, though, this agreement was a whitewash. The real blame, they say, lies not with two midlevel employees but with the executives who supervised them and oversaw a penny-pinching project designed to rush a slapdash aircraft to market.

And now, the CEO who oversaw the introduction of the 737 Max is returning to the same industry from which he was ignominiously dismissed.

To their critics, SPACs are inherently suspect—a shadowy, speculative instrument designed to bypass the due diligence ostensibly built into the IPO process. Using money raised from venture capitalists, private equity, hedge funds, or other investors, a SPAC is essentially a shell company formed to acquire other companies and take them public. The reporting requirements are exceedingly thin: A SPAC has to tell the Securities and Exchange Commission and investors which categories of companies it plans to pursue and little more. According to its SEC filing, New Vista will pursue companies from the “space, defense and communications and advanced air mobility and logistics industries”—all in line with Muilenburg’s experiences at Boeing.

With fewer regulatory measures in place to guide them, SPACs reward salesmanship and promises of investors reaping huge value somewhere down the road. That may be why SPACs often cater to futuristic-sounding industries—aerospace, renewable energy, cryptocurrencies, and other hyped technologies—and why they have attracted a range of speculators, especially since the beginning of the pandemic. “They’re incentivized, if anything, to get the deal done so they can get their 20 percent,” said Andrew Park, a senior policy analyst at Americans for Financial Reform, referring to the fact that SPACs give a fifth of shares to “sponsors”—i.e., founders and investors. “There’s no quality control.”

SPACs have become intensely popular, outpacing traditional IPOs in the last year. They benefit from well-connected and celebrity figureheads: Former baseball star Alex Rodriguez, basketball legend Shaquille O’Neal, and football player turned activist Colin Kaepernick have SPACs. Virgin Galactic—the nascent space-travel firm helmed by Richard Branson—went public via a SPAC. Along with the fantasy sports betting website Draft Kings, Virgin Galactic is often cited as one of the more successful examples of a SPAC. (It may be one of the only successful examples, as SPACs have a high failure rate.)

Boeing has settled lawsuits in relation to the Lion Air crash, but a variety of civil litigation is ongoing regarding the Ethiopian Airlines crash, and some lawsuits may eventually expand to encompass the company executives who oversaw the Max project. But for now, victims’ families must watch as Muilenburg, flush with tens of millions in compensation from Boeing and facing no criminal liability, now launches a potentially lucrative new venture. “This is what he’s attracted to: avoiding scrutiny and pumping up the profit margins,” said Stumo.

Andrew Park, the analyst from Americans for Financial Reform, recently submitted a letter to the leadership of the House Financial Committee recommending regulatory changes to bring more transparency to the SPAC market. In the case of Muilenburg, Park thinks that the former Boeing chief’s ability to raise $200 million in a SPAC offering reveals how flawed these shell companies really are. “This is someone who, in my opinion, has no credibility, and yet he can still raise a SPAC,” said Park. “I think that’s quite incredible.”