The quintessential telecommunications visionary, Dr. Hossein Eslambolchi champions the creation and delivery of pragmatic state-of-the-art transformational business strategies.
Dr. Eslambolchi, Chairman and CEO of 2020 Venture Partners, is recognized in the scientific community as one of the foremost thought-leaders and technological scientists of the high-tech age. He has been compared to GE's Jack Welch for his leadership in business transformation in the global communications industry, and to Thomas Alva Eddison for his significant scientific contributions in the field of IP and wireless communications.
INDUSTRY INNOVATION/INDUSTRY TRANSFORMATION
Dr. Eslambolchi's work on IP technologies includes a number of innovations in various fields. His work supports communications and worldwide IP infrastructure, technologies and applications. Dr. Eslambolchi has over 1000 patents issued, pending and in preparation under his name. These innovations have earned him the respect and admiration of fellow scientists and visibility amongst influential marketplace and public sector leaders. He is recognized by colleagues in global industry sectors as one of the technological geniuses behind the seamless, virtual, wireless IP world that is coalescing before our eyes.
Joining AT&T Bell Laboratories in 1986, Dr. Eslambolchi rose to become Global Technology Officer, Chief Technology Officer, Global Chief Information Officer, President & CEO of ATT Labs and President & CEO of AT&T Global Network Services and was 16B officer of the company since 2001. He also served as a critical member of AT&T’s governing Executive Committee.
As the Chief Transformation Officer at AT&T he developed and executed a comprehensive four-stage strategy that created/reshaped the company's enterprise customer service, network transformation, services and cultural transformation: the overhaul and remodeling of the company that SBC dubbed the "new AT&T".
In less than 3 years, Dr. Eslambolchi's strategy led AT&T to over $10 billion in free cash flow and reduced the company's overall debt by over 85%. He left AT&T soon after its merger with SBC in January 2006.
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