12
David Craig
President, Financial & Risk
Thomson Reuters
Last Year: 11
At the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in January, David Craig’s business card was a conversation piece: Printed on it is a bar code that when scanned displays his Thomson Reuters Permanent Identifier, or PermID. The New York–based media and information company has created some 200 million such codes for people, legal entities and securities in a drive to automate and secure identification processes in an increasingly digital marketplace. One area where strong identification is currently lacking is the blockchain, which was designed to protect anonymity. “We believe that transactions cannot be anonymous in a trusted world,” says Craig, 46, president of Thomson Reuters Financial & Risk, which accounts for half of the corporation’s $12.2 billion in annual revenue. “While you might not want the market to know who your counterparty is, you need to know.” PermID is being offered to various blockchain and federated-identity initiatives, and is being rolled out on World-Check, Thomson Reuters’ anti-money-laundering and know-your-customer compliance service. Financial & Risk, the unit Craig has headed since 2011 — three years after Thomson Corp.’s $17 billion acquisition of Reuters Group — has consolidated more than 850 products into some 150 offerings on three flagship platforms: the Eikon desktop, Elektron for data and trading applications, and Accelus for governance, risk and compliance. “We’ve moved from product to platform, which for us is about a business model, not just a technology play,” Craig explains. Under the open platform model, third-party developers and clients can create applications and integrate them into their Eikon terminals. The App Studio, launched in October, is generating a regular flow of new programs from independent software developers in what amounts to an expanding ecosystem for innovation. “I really admire these fintech companies that I spend a lot of time with,” Craig says. “Five men and women in a garage can do a lot at the moment.”
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The 2016 Tech 50
1. Catherine 2. Jeffrey Sprecher 3. Lance Uggla 4. Phupinder Gill 5. Shawn Edwards and Vlad Kliatchko 6. R. Martin Chavez |
7. Robert Goldstein 8. Adena Friedman 9. Deborah Hopkins 10. Daniel Coleman 11. Stephen Neff 12. David Craig |
13. Michael Spencer 14. Michael Bodson 15. Charles Li 16. Chris Concannon 17. Blythe Masters 18. David Rutter |
19. Neil Katz 20. Lee Olesky 21. Richard McVey 22. Seth Merrin 23. Robert Alexander 24. Brad Katsuyama |
25. Antoine Shagoury 26. David Gledhill 27. Lou Eccleston 28. Andreas Preuss 29. Dan Schulman 30. Scott Dillon |
31. Mike Chinn 32. Craig Donohue 33. Gary Norcross 34. Steven O’Hanlon 35. Sebastián Ceria 36. Michael Cooper |
37. Tyler Kim 38. Neal Pawar 39. David Harding 40. Chris Corrado 41. Brian Conlon 42. Jim Minnick |
43. Stephane Dubois 44. Mazy Dar 45. Yasuki Okai 46. Kim Fournais 47. Jock Percy 48. Robert Schifellite |
49. Brian Sentance 50. Pieter van der Does |