Cinda Hallman: Difference between revisions

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Hallman joined [[Spherion]]<ref name=Spherion.NYT_index>{{cite news |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]

Hallman joined [[Spherion]]<ref name=Spherion.NYT_index>{{cite news |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]

|url=https://www.nytimes.com/topic/company/spherion-corporation

|url=https://www.nytimes.com/topic/company/spherion-corporation

|title=Spherion Corporation}}</ref> in 2001 as Chief Executive Officer, retiring in 2004.<ref name=”Late2008.CIO” /> She died December 2007, at age 63, of an illness.<ref>{{cite news

|title=Spherion Corporation}}</ref> in 2001 as Chief Executive Officer in 2004.<ref name=”Late2008.CIO” /> She died December 2007, at age 63 an illness.<ref>{{cite news

|newspaper=[[The Wall Street Journal]]

|newspaper=[[The Wall Street Journal]]

|title=When Career Trumps Family – WSJ – The Wall Street Journal

|title=When Career Trumps Family – WSJ – The Wall Street Journal


Revision as of 13:45, 24 September 2025

Cinda Hallman

Born 1944

Arkansas

Died 2007
Education Southern Arkansas University
Known for Former CEO of Spherion

Cinda A. Hallman[1][2][3] (1944–2007) became noteworthy for her work in Y2K prior to coining the phrase “outsource the outsourcing process;”[citation needed] both of these were at Du Pont, prior to her nomination to The Research Board.[4]

Former Moses Allen and Alice Dunning Starr House, now The Research Board, “an exclusive assemblage of international CIOs that studies best practices.”[5]

Biography

Arkansas-born Hallman began her career at Conoco in 1966[5] where she was hired as a systems analyst directly after graduating from Southern Arkansas University.[6]

Du Pont

Conoco was acquired by Du Pont in 1981. In 1988 Hallman moved to the parent company,[7]
and advanced to CIO in 1992. By 1999 she held a senior vice president title, the company’s first female vice president .[1][5][Notes 1][8][7]

Spherion

Hallman joined Spherion[9] in 2001 as Chief Executive Officer and retired in 2004.[4] She died December 2007, at age 63 from an illness.[10][Notes 2][11]

She had been a member of Spherion’s board of directors since early 1995.[12] Hallman replaced Raymond Marcy as Chief Executive Officer in 2001, a role that Marcy had held for over a decade, during which time[Notes 3] Spherion acquired a rival, Norrell Corp.
[8]

Spherion’s prior name was Interim Services.[13][Notes 4][14]

Outsourcing

Hallman made a mark in the area of major multi-billion dollar[Notes 5] outsourcing.[15][4]

Board memberships

Among the boards of directors on which she served were “Toys “R” Us, Catalyst, United Way of America and Christiana Care Health Systems.”[16]

Legacy

Beyond having pioneered in what later became known as midsourcing (and receiving various awards),[11][17] Hallman’s alma mater wrote about serving as “an inspiration for young women as she met the challenges of corporate leadership and succeeded at the highest levels.”[6][8]

Personal

Five–foot–six Cinda Hallman is “the elder … (to) fraternal .. twin sister Linda.” Their father died in an accident[14] when they were age 15.[11]

Notes

  1. ^ Hillman was close to Edgar S. Woolard Jr., Du Pont CEO (1989 to 1995).
  2. ^ Decades older than the age at which her father had died: “early in life, on her family’s farm after her father’s death”
  3. ^ 1999
  4. ^ Interim had been sold by H&R Block in 1994
  5. ^ a $4 billion 10 year contract

References

  1. ^ a b Barnaby J. Feder (October 13, 1999). “Management: Heading a Year 2000 Team, as Time Runs Out”. The New York Times.
  2. ^ Richard L. Zewigenhaft; G. William Domhoff (2018). Diversity in the Power Elite: Ironies and Unfulfilled Promises.
  3. ^ “Crossing the executive digital divide”. 2 April 2014.
  4. ^ a b c Abbie Lundberg (January 2, 2008). “In Memoriam: Cinda Hallman”. CIO magazine.
  5. ^ a b c Richard Pastore. “CIO Hall of Fame: Cinda A. Hallman”. CIO magazine.
  6. ^ a b “University receives $1.96 million from Cinda Hallman estate”.
  7. ^ a b “Cinda A. Hallman: Confidence Builder”. CIO magazine. September 15, 1997. pp. 78–79.
  8. ^ a b c Joan Fleischer Tamen (April 11, 2001). “Spherion replaces CEO amid an earnings slide”. Sun-Sentinel. broke the glass ceiling at chemical giant DuPont … was named Spherion’s president and CEO
  9. ^ “Spherion Corporation”. The New York Times.
  10. ^ “When Career Trumps Family – WSJ – The Wall Street Journal”. The Wall Street Journal. who died on Christmas Eve of a brain tumor at age 63
  11. ^ a b c Bruce Caldwell (December 25, 1995). “IW’s 1995 Chief Of The Year: Better Chemistry”. InformationWeek.
  12. ^ “Spherion Announces Dupont Executive to Be New President and CEO”. Bloomberg News. April 10, 2001.
  13. ^ “Spherion Unit’s IPO Price Tops Entire Firm’s Value”. The Wall Street Journal (WSJ). March 6, 2001. Florida-based Spherion, previously known as Interim Services Inc.,
  14. ^ a b Joanne Gordan. “Desperate Times”. Forbes.
  15. ^ Marcia Heroux Pounds. “Spherion to tap Outsourcing”. Sun-Sentinel.
  16. ^ “Cinda A. Hallman”. Legacy.com.
  17. ^ “1996 Visionary Award from Communication Week, and in 1997, … one of the most influential information technology executives of the decade by CIO magazine.“Cinda A. Hallman”. TWST (The Wall Street Transcript).

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