An Indian-American lady, Dhivya Suryadevara has been named the Chief Finance Officer of the US' biggest automaker, General Motors.
Ms. Suryadevara, right now the VP of corporate back, will succeed Chuck Stevens, the General Motor's present CFO, on September 1, the organization said in an announcement.
Chennai-conceived Ms. Suryadevara, 39, has been General Motor's VP of corporate back since July 2017. She will answer to Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Mary Barra, 56, who has been leader of the automaker since 2014.
Ms. Barra and Ms. Suryadevara are the primary ladies in their particular positions in the car business, as no other major worldwide automaker has a female CEO, nor a CEO and CFO who are both female.
General Motors will join a short rundown of S&P 500 organizations, including Hershey Co. furthermore, American Water Works Co., with ladies filling in as CEO and CFO.
Ms. Suryadevara earned her unhitched male's and graduate degrees in business from the University of Madras in Chennai. She moved to the U.S. at 22 years old to seek after her MBA from Harvard University.
She is a contracted money related examiner and bookkeeper, and worked at UBS and PricewaterhouseCoopers before joining the Detroit-based General Motors in 2005 at 25 years old.
"Dhivya's understanding and administration in a few key parts all through our budgetary activities positions her well to expand on the solid business comes about we've conveyed in the course of the most recent quite a while," Barra said in an announcement.
Mr. Stevens, 58, has been CFO at the biggest US automaker since January 2014 and will resign in March one year from now as an over 40-year veteran of the organization.
He will stay with the organization as a counselor until his retirement, the announcement said.
Mr. Stevens started at the Buick division in 1978 and, similar to Ms. Barra, was taught at General Motors Institute, which moved toward becoming Kettering University. He had a key part in GM setting up its joint wander in China with SAIC Motor Corp. what's more, was a critical player in GM offering its long-battling Opel business to French automaker PSA Group.
Ms. Suryadevara, right now the VP of corporate back, will succeed Chuck Stevens, the General Motor's present CFO, on September 1, the organization said in an announcement.
Chennai-conceived Ms. Suryadevara, 39, has been General Motor's VP of corporate back since July 2017. She will answer to Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Mary Barra, 56, who has been leader of the automaker since 2014.
Ms. Barra and Ms. Suryadevara are the primary ladies in their particular positions in the car business, as no other major worldwide automaker has a female CEO, nor a CEO and CFO who are both female.
General Motors will join a short rundown of S&P 500 organizations, including Hershey Co. furthermore, American Water Works Co., with ladies filling in as CEO and CFO.
Ms. Suryadevara earned her unhitched male's and graduate degrees in business from the University of Madras in Chennai. She moved to the U.S. at 22 years old to seek after her MBA from Harvard University.
She is a contracted money related examiner and bookkeeper, and worked at UBS and PricewaterhouseCoopers before joining the Detroit-based General Motors in 2005 at 25 years old.
"Dhivya's understanding and administration in a few key parts all through our budgetary activities positions her well to expand on the solid business comes about we've conveyed in the course of the most recent quite a while," Barra said in an announcement.
Mr. Stevens, 58, has been CFO at the biggest US automaker since January 2014 and will resign in March one year from now as an over 40-year veteran of the organization.
He will stay with the organization as a counselor until his retirement, the announcement said.
Mr. Stevens started at the Buick division in 1978 and, similar to Ms. Barra, was taught at General Motors Institute, which moved toward becoming Kettering University. He had a key part in GM setting up its joint wander in China with SAIC Motor Corp. what's more, was a critical player in GM offering its long-battling Opel business to French automaker PSA Group.
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