蜜桃影像


蜜桃影像 Alumni Association
Marquette.edu

College of Engineering Award Recipients

Professional Achievement Award

Edmund SteinikeEDMUND R. STEINIKE, ENG '85

Roswell, Ga.

Ed Steinike鈥檚 former boss used to say, 鈥淐ontrol your own destiny or someone else will.鈥 That boss was Jack Welch of General Electric.

It鈥檚 something Ed took to heart, working his way through Marquette, then working his way up the ladder. Today, he is vice president and chief information officer of the Coca-Cola Co., leading the company鈥檚 information technology strategy, services and operations worldwide.

Another philosophy Ed took to heart was Marquette鈥檚 mission and the pillars of excellence, faith, leadership and service. 鈥淢arquette provided the balance in education that turns out to be so valuable in the business world,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚t really helps build leadership skills.鈥

Ed used those leadership skills at General Electric from 1976鈥2002, eventually becoming chief information officer of GE Energy Services and GE Medical Systems.

He began his tenure at the Coca-Cola Co. as chief technology officer in 2002, responsible for all technology, including networks, data centers, operations, data warehousing and systems architecture. From 2004鈥07, he was chief development officer and CIO for Coca-Cola North America. In this role, he helped leverage technology to deliver business results and introduced key applications in finance, business planning, consumer Web services, customer relationship management, supply chain and innovation.

From 2007鈥10, Ed was executive vice president and chief information officer at ING Insurance, for which he was responsible for all aspects of customer and information technology systems and services.

Echoing Welch, Ed has advice for young professionals. 鈥淪et some goals, and go after them,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t helps if you really like what you do 鈥 that keeps the energy level up. In the end, nothing beats good preparation and hard work.鈥

Fun fact: Two of Ed鈥檚 favorite books are Guns, Germs and Steel, the Fate of Human Societies and Outliers, the Story of Success. He also recommends to any young professional Good to Great by Jim Collins.