The Boeing
Company today named Walt W. Braithwaite as president of Boeing Africa.
Naming Braithwaite to this newly created post, is part of the company's
effort to broaden its global reach and vision by establishing offices
and operations in many areas of the world.
In this new position, Braithwaite will play a corporate ambassadorial
role to the region, representing the company to governments, businesses,
media and regional communities. In addition, he will be responsible for
providing in-region support to company operating group executives for
Aircraft & Missiles Systems, Space & Communications and Commercial
Airplanes business activities in the Sub-Sahara region.
Braithwaite will report to Harry Stonecipher, Boeing president and chief
operating officer. He will initially establish offices in South Africa
and Ghana.
"The Boeing Company's vision is to grow its presence in many regions of
the world. Walt is the right person for this position and I'm certain he
will do an excellent job in becoming the face of Boeing in a very
dynamic region of the world," Stonecipher said.
"I look forward to representing our company and working with the
operating groups and Company Offices to identify opportunities for
increasing our markets in the region and to demonstrate our local
presence through good corporate citizenship," Braithwaite said of his
appointment.
Braithwaite joined Boeing in 1966 as an associate tool engineer in the
company's Fabrication Division. Since that time, Braithwaite has held a
variety of increasingly responsible positions, most recently as vice
president, Company Offices Administration, a post he has held since
1997.
Many of the positions Braithwaite has held during his 34-year career
have involved engineering, computer-aided design and manufacturing,
information systems development and program management. Prior to his
most recent assignment, Braithwaite served as vice president of
Information and Support Services, where he was responsible for leading
company-wide, cross-functional activities for successful deploying
distributed computing, information systems security, and disaster
preparedness. In March 1993 he was vice president of Commercial
Airplanes Information Systems with responsibility for all computing used
in design, manufacturing and support of commercial airplanes. Prior to
that he served as vice president on Boeing Commercial Airplanes
Information Systems and Architecture. He also has held director of
Program Management positions and various chief and lead engineer
positions in Commercial Airplanes.
In 1997, Braithwaite was appointed to serve a second three-year term on
the Commission of Physical Sciences, Mathematics and Applications of the
National Research Council, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences
and National Academy of Engineering. He is also one of 21 business
representatives appointed to the U.S. Department of Commerce Advisory
Committee on Africa.
He has been honored by the American Institute of Manufacturing
Technology for outstanding technical contributions to the science of
computer integrated technology. His list of honors also includes awards
from the National Institute of Standards and Technology for leadership
and contributions to the development of the Initial Graphics Exchange
Specification and Product Data Exchange Specification. In February 1995,
Braithwaite was selected Black Engineer of the Year by the Council of
Engineering Deans of the Historically Black Colleges and Universities,
Mobil Corporation and U.S. Black Engineer Magazine. This award was for
his accomplishments and contributions both to technology and the
community.
Braithwaite graduated from the American Institute of Engineering and
Technology in 1965 with a bachelor's degree in engineering. He received
a master's degree in computer science from the University of Washington
and also earned a master's degree in business management from a 1980-81
Sloan Fellowship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1998,
he was awarded an honorary doctor of laws degree from the University of
the West Indies.
Braithwaite was born in Kingston, Jamaica and was raised and educated in
Kingston and in London. |