Bernard Meyerson

By admin , 21 December 2015
Bernard
Meyerson
Male
Description

Founder and developer of IBM's highly successful Analog and Mixed Signal business, Meyerson has served across a series of science, engineering, and business leadership roles throughout his career at IBM.

Born in New York City, NY, he received his B.S. degree in 1975 and his M.S. degree in 1977, both in Physics. In 1980, he earned his Ph.D. in Solid-State Physics; all degrees were from City University of New York.

Meyerson joined IBM in 1980 as a Research Staff Member researching surface chemistry and epitaxy as related to silicon-germanium based heterostructure devices. Over the years he led a series of science, engineering, and business organizations, culminating in the founding and development of IBM's highly successful Analog and Mixed Signal business until 2003, then moving on to lead IBM's global semiconductor development alliances. Broadening his scope, in 2006 he assumed leadership of strategic alliances for the Systems and Technology Group.

In 2010 he assumed the role of Chief Innovation Officer, with his team focusing on the early identification of major technical and/or business discontinuities impacting business and society, driving innovation across the breadth of IBM as required to proactively address the opportunities such discontinuities created. In 2013, his team integrated into IBM's Corporate Strategy function, responsible for the definition and execution of corporate-wide technical and business initiatives. Meyerson subsequently has served as IBM's Vice President of Innovation.

He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and a member of the United States National Academy of Engineering. His numerous technical and business awards include the Materials Research Society Medal, the Electrochemical Society Electronics Division Award, the IEEE Ernst Weber Award, the Electron Devices Society J. J. Ebers Award, and the 2007 Lifetime Achievement Award from SEMI. Meyerson was further honored with the 2011 Pake Prize of the American Physical Society, recognizing his combined original scientific research and subsequent leadership in creating a major new semiconductor business for IBM.

He was also honored by selection to present the 2014 Turing Lecture at the Royal Institute in London and the Universities of Cardiff, Manchester, and Edinburgh. This honor is presented to one leader in information technology each year, in memory of Alan Turing, the individual credited with the creation of modern computer science. For his innovation efforts, Meyerson was cited as "Inventor of the Year" by the New York State Legislature in 1998, "United States Distinguished Inventor of the Year" by the US IP Law Association and the Patent and Trademark Office in 1999, and again recognized in May of 2008 as "Inventor of the Year" by the New York State Intellectual Property Lawyers Association.

On December 13, 2013, he delivered a presentation of IBM's 5 in 5—the annual IBM effort to identify five predictions that will become a commercial reality—on the CBS This Morning News program, which can be seen at cbsnews.com.

IBM
Leader of a series of science, engineering and business organizations culminating in the founding and development of IBM's highly successful Analog and Mixed Signal business
Date of Birth
1954-06-02
Bernard Meyerson

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