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Tony Comper likes to say that he can sum up his remarkable career in Canadian banking in 25 stories. In a business often filled with big personalities and memorable characters, Tony's motto is Festina Lente -- make haste slowly. That wry self-deprecation is typical of a man who prepared for his financial career by reading Chaucer. In Personal Account: 25 Tales About Leadership, Learning, and Legacy from a Lifetime at Bank of Montreal, Comper chronicles how he guided the bank's software evolution on real-time banking and the introduction of ABMs. He also saw BMO evolve from traditional lender…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Tony Comper likes to say that he can sum up his remarkable career in Canadian banking in 25 stories. In a business often filled with big personalities and memorable characters, Tony's motto is Festina Lente -- make haste slowly. That wry self-deprecation is typical of a man who prepared for his financial career by reading Chaucer. In Personal Account: 25 Tales About Leadership, Learning, and Legacy from a Lifetime at Bank of Montreal, Comper chronicles how he guided the bank's software evolution on real-time banking and the introduction of ABMs. He also saw BMO evolve from traditional lender to facilitator in the market, partnering with business to create a more vibrant source of capital. That innovation included Tony's role in integrating women and new Canadians into BMO while fighting anti-Semitism in the community. As well, he was critical in creating new banking models for the Indigenous community. Personal Account uses lessons first learned from reading Canterbury Tales in a journey that started at the University of Toronto and progressed to the highest levels of the nation's banking industry. Of working at the branch level as a summer student and then, abandoning the conventional role in the branches, helping create BMO's tech revolution and transforming the nation's way of doing business. Of integrating social changes into a new model of an inclusive business that reflects the community around it. A first-person analysis of the major transitions he witnessed and participated in his almost four decades at the bank. A memoir of turbulent, challenging times. An examination of surviving the most severe financial shocks without jeopardizing the nation's financial stability. Personal Account is equal parts warm memoir, teaching lesson and a reminder of the values in leaving a legacy to those who inherit your mantle. "I have known and respected Tony Comper as a fellow banker and, for ten years, a fellow corporate board member. This book is an extraordinarily insightful view of not only his accomplished career, but a rare look into important issues and decisions facing the CEO of one of North America's largest financial services companies." -- Austin Adams, Corporate Director and retired JPMorgan Chase & Co. CIO "As an executive of another bank, I found many parallels with the various challenges Comper faced over his career. The 'Merger That Never Was' and the management challenges that followed make for some particularly interesting reading." -- Robert Chisholm, retired Scotiabank vice-chairman "A must-read memoir written by a gentleman banker about lessons learned and wisdom gathered." -- Diane Francis, author and National Post editor-at-large "Are bankers boring? Men and women in suits crunching numbers and talking high finance? Most of us have thought so. Until you start realizing the full impact their smallest decisions have on our lives. Tony Comper has been there and done that for almost half a century, from the highest levels of Canadian banking -- and now he gives us the inside story in a unique style. He uses 'moments' as bite-sized teaching experiences all of us can use. Not boring at all." -- Peter Mansbridge, broadcaster and author Tony Comper, C.M. began working at Bank of Montreal at age 16, launching a four-decade-long career that culminated first with his tenure as the Chief Operating Officer and then as the bank's Chief Executive Officer from 1998-2006. Tony and his wife, Liz, were named members of the Order of Canada for their work with the FAST (Fighting Anti-Semitism Together) foundation. Bruce Dowbiggin's career has included successful stints in television, radio, theatre and print. His books include Money Players (finalist for the 2004 National Business Book Award), The Defence Never Rests, The Stick, and Cap in Hand. Bruce lives in Calgary, Alberta.
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Autorenporträt
Tony Comper, CM (Toronto, Ontario), began working at Bank of Montreal at age 16, launching a four decade-long career that culminated first with his tenure as the chief operating officer, and then as the bank’s chief executive officer from 1998–2006. Tony and his wife, Liz, were named members of the Order of Canada for their work with the FAST (Fighting Anti-Semitism Together) foundation. Bruce Dowbiggin’s (Calgary, Alberta) career has included successful stints in television, radio, theater, and print. His books include Money Players (a finalist for the 2004 National Business Book Award), The Defence Never Rests, The Stick, and Cap in Hand.