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Tom Glocer

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Tom Glocer
NameTom Glocer
Birth date1959
Birth placeUnited States
OccupationBusiness executive
Known forFormer CEO of Thomson Reuters

Tom Glocer is an American business executive and investor noted for leading Thomson Reuters through a major transformation and for subsequent roles in technology and venture capital. He has been associated with prominent organizations and institutions across media, finance, technology, and public policy. Glocer's career spans executive leadership, board service, and philanthropy tied to global finance centers and elite universities.

Early life and education

Glocer was born in 1959 and raised in the United States with formative influences connected to international law and diplomacy through family ties to Washington, D.C. circles. He attended Yale University where he studied Economics and was influenced by faculty and alumni involved with Council on Foreign Relations and Brookings Institution networks. He later earned a Juris Doctor from Columbia Law School, interacting with scholars affiliated with American Bar Association and legal clinics tied to New York City institutions. His early academic mentors included professors active in publications like the Harvard Law Review and organizations such as the American Enterprise Institute.

Career

Glocer began his professional career at the international law firm Shearman & Sterling and later joined the International Monetary Fund-linked financial community before moving into media and information services. He built experience at companies connected to global capital markets including Reuters Group and later the merged entities that created Thomson Reuters. During his ascent he worked with executives and boards composed of leaders from firms such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, BlackRock, and CitiGroup. He navigated relationships with regulatory authorities including the Securities and Exchange Commission and interacted with policy forums such as the World Economic Forum and trade associations like the International Press Institute.

Tenure at Thomson Reuters

As a senior executive and then CEO of Thomson Reuters, Glocer oversaw strategic acquisitions, divestitures, and digital transformation initiatives that affected legal, tax, and financial workflows used by clients including major law firms and investment banks. He led integration efforts following the merger of Thomson Corporation and Reuters Group and worked with corporate governance bodies such as the Board of Directors of Thomson Reuters and audit committees influenced by standards from Financial Accounting Standards Board and International Accounting Standards Board. His tenure involved partnerships and competition with firms like LexisNexis, Bloomberg L.P., FactSet Research Systems, and S&P Global. Under his leadership the company pursued product modernization involving collaborations with technology providers like Microsoft, Oracle Corporation, IBM, and cloud platforms promoted by Amazon Web Services. He addressed challenges related to media consolidation debated at venues such as the Business Roundtable and regulatory reviews by entities including the UK Financial Conduct Authority and Competition and Markets Authority (United Kingdom).

Post-Reuters activities and board memberships

After departing Thomson Reuters, Glocer moved into venture investing and advisory roles, co-founding and advising firms in the technology and security sectors. He served on corporate boards and advisory councils for organizations including Yahoo!, Starbucks, Investment AB Kinnevik, YipitData, Blackstone, The Carlyle Group, and technology startups backed by Sequoia Capital and Andreessen Horowitz. He engaged with public policy and international affairs institutions such as the Council on Foreign Relations, Trilateral Commission, Atlantic Council, and served on advisory boards tied to Columbia University and Yale University. Glocer also joined boards of global infrastructure and data firms that cooperate with entities like Cisco Systems, Ericsson, and Nokia. His board seats placed him alongside executives from AT&T, Verizon Communications, Deutsche Bank, and HSBC, and connected him to philanthropic governance in organizations including United Nations Foundation and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation-affiliated initiatives.

Personal life and philanthropy

Glocer is active in philanthropy and civic engagement, contributing to educational, cultural, and public policy causes aligned with institutions such as Yale University, Columbia University, Lincoln Center, and museum benefactors like The Metropolitan Museum of Art. He participates in fundraising and advisory roles for medical and research centers connected to Johns Hopkins University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and public health initiatives partnering with World Health Organization programs. His philanthropic interests include support for journalism and press freedom groups like Reporters Without Borders and the International Center for Journalists, and policy think tanks including Brookings Institution and Council on Foreign Relations. Glocer maintains residences in major global business hubs including New York City and London, and engages in mentorship networks for entrepreneurs associated with accelerators like Y Combinator and incubators supported by Techstars.

Category:American chief executives Category:Columbia Law School alumni Category:Yale University alumni