Announcement
October 27, 2005
Richard Ivey Dean Stephenson inducted
into the CIPA Hall of Fame
Carol Stephenson, a champion of innovation
who helped build a competitive telecommunications
industry in Canada, is being honoured by induction into the Hall
of Fame of the Canadian Information Productivity Awards (CIPA).
The CIPA Hall of Fame was established in
1995 as a permanent tribute to Canadian pioneers and builders
of the Information Age. CIPA is Canada’s oldest and largest
awards program in the field of information technology and the
premier showcase for Canadian IT and innovation. It is supported
by its Managing Sponsor, CGI Group Inc., and other leading industry
sponsors as well as allied technology associations. The mission
of the awards is to celebrate visionary organizations that have
developed innovative results-based technology solutions.
Stephenson, Dean of the Richard Ivey School
of Business at the University of Western Ontario, had a 30-year
career in the telecommunications industry and was a leading figure
in its transformation from a regulated and monopolistic environment
to one of the most competitive and technologically advanced national
industries in the world.
“Carol Stephenson personifies the kind
of innovative, energetically competitive and courageous leader
that Canada needs to strengthen its globally competitive economy,”
John Kelly, Chairman of NexInnovations Inc. and Chair of the 2005
CIPA Hall of Fame Selection Panel, said today in announcing the
honour.
Stephenson will be inducted November 1 during
the 13th annual CIPA Gala Banquet, the largest celebration of
IT-based innovation in Canada. The CIPA Hall of Fame resides on
the CIPA Web site at www.cipa.com.
Stephenson began her career at Bell Canada
in 1973, advancing to become Vice-President of Bell Canada in
1988. From 1995 to 1998, as President and CEO of Stentor Resource
Centre Inc, she played a key role in the telecom industry’s
smooth transition to a fully competitive marketplace. She was
subsequently President and COO (The Americas) of BCE Media Inc.
Then as President and CEO of Lucent Technologies
Canada from 1999 to 2003, she spearheaded the team that succeeded
in tripling Lucent’s market share in Canada despite an industry
downturn. She was appointed Dean of the Richard Ivey School of
Business in July 2003, and in September 2005 announced a revolutionary
revamping of its curriculum to better prepare executives for a
business world of constant innovation.
“Ms. Stephenson has pursued excellence
throughout her career, and has been a mentor and role model for
an entire generation of executives,” said Serge Godin, a
Hall of Fame member and Chair of CIPA’s Managing Sponsor,
CGI Group Inc.
Stephenson has earned significant recognition
for her community work and industry involvement. The Canadian
Women in Communications association named her Woman of the Year
in 1995, and in 2001 she received the Woman of Distinction designation
from the YWCA. In 2000, she was awarded an honorary doctorate
in engineering from Ryerson University.
A past chair of the Information Technology
Association of Canada (1997-98), Stephenson sits on the board
of the Government of Canada’s Advisory Committee on Senior
Level Retention and Compensation, and recently served on an Ontario
government external task force on the management of large-scale
I & IT projects.
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