2021 CFO of the Year: Jim Crews
As part of Gaylor Electric’s senior strategic management team, Jim Crews manages the accounting and finance departments and provides financial resources and insights.
As part of Gaylor Electric’s senior strategic management team, Jim Crews manages the accounting and finance departments and provides financial resources and insights.
Norman Gould provides strategic insights to the leadership and ownership of IMMI, which designs, engineers, manufactures and markets safety solutions and products that protect millions of people around the world.
Dan Harmeyer’s primary responsibility is leading the finance team at Batesville Casket Co. and working with the executive management team to deliver on its mission of helping families honor the lives of those they love.
Todd Borgmann is responsible for finance, accounting, IT, crude oil trading, and economics and activities for Calumet Specialty Products Co., which produces nearly 3,400 unique specialty products, including various asphalts, oils, fuels and gels.
Since becoming CFO of First Financial Corp. in 2010, Rodger McHargue has helped First Financial double in size, from $2.5 billion in assets to $5 billion, and expand its footprint beyond Indiana and Illinois to include Kentucky and Tennessee.
Tehea Harding oversees EmployIndy’s fiscal and administrative functions, including human resources, accounting, grants and contracts, and IT facilities.
Jason Cadwell oversees finance, accounting, revenue cycle, human resources, information systems, property and facility management, and agency risk management for Four County Comprehensive Mental Health Center Inc., a not-for-profit community mental health center that serves 11 north-central Indiana counties.
As the number two executive at CICF, Jennifer Bartenbach leads the internal workings of the foundation—the financial operations, information technology, marketing and communications, donor services, and human resources.
With more than $1.25 billion coming in and the majority of it being redistributed on an annual basis, there is never a shortage of work for Heidi Babkowski to do at the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
Deanna Oware’s job as a member of the leadership team for the Indiana Department of Workforce Development is to ensure effective operation of the finance department’s procurement, accounting and payroll, budget, grant accounting, and analysis and reconciliation units. Finance
Thompson is the first African-American to lead the chamber board and is the CEO and chairman of four businesses, including Thompson Distribution and First Electric Supply.
The move is one of six high-level promotions and transitions announced Tuesday morning by Pacers Sports & Entertainment.
The board at Newfields chose Christian to serve as the chair and lead the arts campus out of a race-related controversy that led to the resignation of its former president.
It is full-employment season for political operatives.
A single job doesn’t have to be everything to everyone anymore. Fractional employment lets employees work part time for several different employers—able to flex their interest muscle in one role, their accumulated expertise in another.
Rather than hiring full-time executives, companies are increasingly likely to turn to a fractional executive—someone who serves part time, typically on contract rather than as an employee.
Officiating at the highest level of football isn’t Bryan Neale’s only gig. He’s also chief executive of Indianapolis-based Blind Zebra Consulting, a business management consulting group.
Calumet Specialty Products Partners LP on Thursday announced a leadership team shakeup that will give the Indianapolis-based company a new CEO, chairman of the board and chief financial officer.
Former Indiana University Health executive Ryan Kitchell will replace former chair and Indiana Higher Education Commissioner Teresa Lubbers, who announced she would step down from both roles in November.
Todd Borgmann, Calumet’s former CFO, was promoted to CEO effective this week. The move, and several other executive-level changes, were triggered by the May 1 retirement of board chairman Fred Fehsenfeld.