(Previously Not Ranked) The postcrisis organizational changes at $2.5 trillion-in-assets Bank of America Corp. didn’t stop with the merger with Merrill Lynch & Co. or Brian Moynihan’s replacing Kenneth Lewis as CEO. In January they also thrust Catherine Bessant into the role of global technology and operations executive.
BofA has a 150-country reach, and its retail business alone consists of 5,900 offices, 58 million consumer and small-business relationships, 18,000 automated teller machines and more than 30 million active online customers. A 28-year BofA veteran, Bessant, 49, had mainly been a client of the 100,000-employee, technology-focused group she now heads, most recently as president of global corporate banking.
Deciding which services “should run on rails that are similar, and which should be customized” is a central concern, she says, and risk mitigation is a priority. “No bank can be successful without taking risk, but it’s about being brilliant at it.” Also high on the agenda: consolidation of data centers. “A lot of our complexity is because of this tremendous history of growth by acquisition,” she notes. “Now that era is over.”
Return to the 2010 Tech 40 Index