I didn't have a very straightforward path early on in my career. After graduating from a performing arts college in NY, I played music professionally for two years. After realizing that was a tough way to make a living I took a job on Wall Street working for Drexel Burnham Lambert in their HR department. I stayed there for a few years until a friend of mine who had an IT job at Salomon Brothers got me an entry-level position working night shift as a mainframe operator. A year after I joined Salomon, UNIX was in it's pilot phase on Wall Street and Salomon was in the forefront of that transition. I was able to participate at the ground level and see how that technology transformed the business. After working my way into various key leadership positions at Salomon Brothers, Salomon became Salomon Smith Barney, then Salomon Smith Barney became Citigroup and the firm had 500,000 employees. Before I knew it I was managing a very large-scale environment with staff and locations across the globe. At the end of my tenure I was an EVP who oversaw Infrastructure for the company's Capital Markets division which was 100,000 people in size...all before my 40th birthday. I left Citi to hold similar positions at Credit Suisse, JP Morgan Chase, RBC, Trade Web Markets, and now Black Knight. I always felt, and still do, that working at Salomon Brothers and staying there throughout the formation of Citigroup was the equivalent of receiving a Ph.D. from Harvard in Information Technology. That experience was unmatched for me and often leveraged in all of my roles afterwards and to this day.