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Christopher Galvin

Christopher B. Galvin
Born March 21, 1950
Alma mater Northwestern University
Occupation Co-founder Harrison Street Capital LLC
Known for CEO Motorola, Inc.
Spouse(s) Cindy
Children 2 sons

Christopher B. Galvin (born March 21, 1950) is an American businessman. He served as the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Motorola from 1997 to 2003.

Christopher Galvin is the grandson of Paul Galvin, the founder of Motorola, and the son of Robert Galvin, who served as CEO of Motorola from 1959 to 1990. He received his BS in Political Science from Northwestern University and his M.B.A. from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

From 1967 to 1973, during college, Galvin held part-time summer assignments at Motorola. From 1973-1983, he served full-time positions in sales, sales management, marketing management and mobile two-way radio product management, taking leave 1975-77 to attend graduate business school full-time. From 1983 to 1985, he became Marketing Director then General Manager of the Tegal semiconductor equipment unit owned by Motorola Inc. In 1985, he became Vice-President and Director of Motorola’s radio paging Division where he sponsored the team that created one of the first virtually completely automated manufacturing operations in the US, called Project Bandit. Galvin was promoted to Corporate Vice-President and General Manager of Paging. In 1988, he was named Chief Corporate Staff Officer of the corporation, later Senior Vice President and appointed to the Policy and Operating Committees of Motorola Inc. In 1990, he was promoted to Assistant Chief Operating Officer and joined as the third member of the Office of the CEO of Motorola Inc. In 1993, he was elevated to President and Chief Operating Officer. In 1997, he became CEO. In 1999, he added the role of Chairman of the Board to that of CEO.

Following the dot.com crash in 2000, he led a massive three-year restructuring of Motorola that included large lay-offs, closure of manufacturing facilities and reducing break-even costs. Simultaneously, Galvin led the renewal of Six Sigma Quality through Digital Six Sigma and introduced Motorola’s MOTO language advertising campaign in 2002. The RAZR cellular phone was designed by Galvin’s innovators in new product development methodologies created during the 2001-2003 timeframe. RAZR was introduced July 27, 2004. The innovation behind the RAZR was so cutting edge that even Galvin's eventual successor, Ed Zander, stated “There was a small team developing the RAZR before I got there. When I saw the technology, it blew me away.”


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