Randy Jayne
Edward Randolph Jayne II | |
---|---|
Managing Partner at Heidrick & Struggles | |
In office 1996 – Present | |
Personal details | |
Born |
Kirksville, Missouri | September 25, 1944
Alma mater | United States Air Force |
Profession | Executive Search Partner |
Military service | |
Service/branch | United States Air Force/Air National Guard |
Years of service | 1962 – 2000 |
Rank | Major General |
Dr. Edward Randolph “Randy” Jayne II (born 1944) is a Managing Partner at Heidrick & Struggles (1996 – present) and was a senior executive in defense and technology industries, a senior government civilian executive, a military officer and combat pilot. A former public company president, and leader of two businesses in the defense industry, he also served in the White House under three successive United States presidents. Prior to his business career, Jayne spent over ten years on active duty in the Air Force, including two tours as a fighter pilot in Southeast Asia.[1] In parallel to his corporate career, Jayne served in the Air National Guard, serving in the District of Columbia and Missouri Air National Guards, and retiring after 34 years of service as a Major General. In November, 2015, he became the Chairman of the Board of the US Air Force Academy Endowment, the fundraising organization for that institution.
Early life
Jayne was born on September 24, 1944 in the small rural college and agricultural city of Kirksville, in Northeast Missouri. His father was a lawyer and World War II Naval officer veteran, and his mother was a schoolteacher and later an elected School Board Member and President in Kirksville. He is the eldest of three brothers; Marty Jayne, a retired Air Force Judge Advocate General, is a Professor and Department Head of the Criminal Justice Program at Truman University, Kirksville, and Tom Jayne is an attorney with Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad.
Randy Jayne graduated from Kirksville High School in May 1962, and entered the United States Air Force Academy, Colorado in June of that year. Jayne graduated from the Air Force Academy with a Bachelor of Science degree in International Relations in 1966,[2] and entered the Air Force [3] as a Second Lieutenant.[3] He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and completed his PhD in Political Science and National Security Affairs in 1969. His doctoral thesis, published by the Center for International Studies, is titled “The ABM Debate: Strategic Defense and National Security,” [4] after he completed his Ph.D he served a series of operational flying and Washington D.C., special staff tours.
Military career
During Jayne’s over ten years as an active Air Officer, he had a number of operational flying assignments, and special staff duty in the White House. After completing Air Force Pilot Training as a Distinguished Graduate (1969- 1970), he served as a special operations pilot flying the A-1E Skyraider in South-East Asia at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base (1971- 1972). In 1974, he completed upgrade training in the F-4 Phantom, and returned to Southeast Asia for a second fighter assignment, this time at Korat RTAFB. Jayne’s combat decorations include two Silver Stars, five Distinguished Flying Crosses and eight Air Medals.[5] Other key military assignments during this time included two tours in the Executive Office of the President and service as a USAF Jet Instructor Pilot at Moody Air Force Base. In the White House, Jayne served first as a White House Fellow in 1973-1974 during the Nixon Administration,[6] and later, in 1976-1977, as a staff member of the National Security Council during the Ford Administration, working for and as a staff member of the United States National Security Council [7] working for General Brent Scowcroft, and serving alongside other young professional staffers such as Robert Gates, Stephen Hadley and Robert Kimmitt.
In 1977, Jayne was appointed by President Jimmy Carter as Associate Director in the Office of Management and Budget [8] At the same time, he transferred from the active Air Force to the Air National Guard (ANG), where he would serve for over twenty-three additional years as an officer, pilot, commander, and senior staff officer. Joining the District of Columbia ANG in 1977, he flew the F-105 Thunderchief and served as the 121st Fighter Squadron Operations Officer. Moving to the Missouri ANG in 1980, he again checked out in the F-4 Phantom, the same fighter he had flown in one of the Southeast Asia tours. For fifteen years, nine in the F-4 and six in the plane he had been responsible for at McDonnell Douglas Corporation (MDC), the F-15 Eagle, Jayne was a combat ready pilot in the 131st Fighter Wing in St Louis.
From 1993-1995, Jayne served as the senior “traditional Guardsman” officer in the 1,200-person fighter unit. As Vice Wing Commander, Colonel Jayne led the inspection preparation prior to the 1995 award of the Air Force’s highest Operational Readiness Inspection rating, that of “Outstanding,” to the 131st Wing.[2] He also played key roles in St Louis and the Pentagon in the National Guard’s massive civil response to the Midwestern Floods of 1993-1994 and the nationwide call-up and deployment of ANG forces to Desert Shield/Desert Storm. In November 1995, Jayne was selected to be the Air National Guard Assistant to the Commander of Air Force Space Command in Colorado Springs.[9] He served this leadership role for five years, serving four AFSC Commanders, before his retirement in 2000 as a Major General [10] with over thirty-four years of total commissioned service.
Civilian career
Prior to joining Heidrick & Struggles, Jayne occupied leadership positions in three public companies, including two Fortune 100 aerospace and defense firms. At General Dynamics (GD), he served at the director and vice president levels in the company’s corporate headquarters. In 1987, he was recruited to McDonnell Douglas Corporation, where he served in a number of executive assignments. At Insituform Mid-America he served as President and Chief Operating Officer.[11]
National security & international affairs
In 1977, Jayne left active military service to accept appointment by President Jimmy Carter as the Associate Director for National Security and International Affairs in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the Executive Office of the President.[12] In this role, he was responsible for the budget for the United States Department of Defence, United States Department of State, and the Intelligence Community (IC).[13] During this three-year assignment, Jayne participated in a number of major national security decisions, including full scale development and initial production for the F-16, F-18, F-117 Stealth Fighter, AWACS, the Tomahawk Cruise Missile, M1A1 Abrams tank, and NASA’s Space Shuttle.
Aerospace industry
In 1980, Jayne left government service to join the aerospace industry, hired by General Dynamics (GD) as Director of Aerospace Planning, and two years later becoming Vice President of Strategic Planning. As a key member of the GD executive team, he was involved in the acquisitions of Cessna Aircraft and Chrysler Defense, and the initiation of major programs such as the F-16C, the Advanced Cruise Missile, Tomahawk, the M1A2 Abrams tank, and the SSN-21 attack submarine. After seven years at GD, Jayne was recruited to what was at the time the second largest defense contractor behind GD, McDonnell Douglas Corporation (MDC). He joined as Vice President, Program Development for the MDC Astronautics Company. In 1989 he moved to McDonnell Aircraft Company as the Vice President and General Manager of the F-15 Eagle, program leading that international fighter program as it built new aircraft for the US, Saudis, and Israelis, supported offshore assembly in Japan, and supported US, Saudi and Israeli Eagles in operation all around the world. By this time, MDC has surpassed GD as the nation’s largest defense contractor.[14]
In 1990, Jayne became President of McDonnell Douglas Missile Systems Company. There, he inherited five major firm fixed price development programs and a near term loss potential of over $200 million. Three years later, these contracts had all been restructured or completed, and Missile Systems was a highly profitable operation. In 1993, Jayne was recruited to Insituform Mid-America (IMA) as President and Chief Operating Officer. The late 1994 merger of IMA and Instituform Technologies led Jayne to his present position at Heidrick & Struggles.
Current career
During the time Randy Jayne has been at Heidrick & Struggles, he has successfully placed over one hundred Presidents and Chief Executive Officers. He has conducted searches for CEO’s, Presidents, other senior executives, and Board Members for a wide variety of public, private and not-for-profit organizations, and writing articles for leadership organizations.[15] At Heidrick & Struggles, he is the senior member of the firm’s global Aerospace, Defense & Aviation Practice and is also a member of the CEO & Board Practice and the Higher Education Practice. His search practice includes corporate clients in both aerospace and technology. In addition, he has recruited US National Laboratory CEO’s, University Presidents, and Deans of Engineering.
From 2001 to August, 2013, Jayne served on the corporate Board of Directors of CAE, Inc., (NYSE and TSE symbol CAE) [16] the world leader in aircraft flight simulators, airline pilot training, and modeling and simulation. At CAE, he served on the Corporate Governance Committee. Since 2002, Jayne has served as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Institute for Defense Analysis (IDA) [17] in Alexandria, Virginia, the prestigious independent research and analysis organization chartered by the Office of the Secretary Defense (OSD) over fifty years ago. IDA conducts major studies and analysis for the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the National Security Agency, and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. He chairs the IDA Nominating and Governance Committee. Jayne is a member, and as of November, 2015, the Chairman, of the USAFA Endowment Founding Board of Directors [18] and of the Board of Trustees of the Falcon Foundation at the Air Force Academy.[19]
Jayne has been a guest lecturer and seminar participant at the three service academies, the National Defense University, and the three services’ war colleges and intermediate service schools. He is a past member of the Board of Directors of the Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum,[20] and the Board of Directors of the Northern Virginia Technology Council (NVTC).[21] In 2009, Jayne was elected to the Board of Directors of the White House Fellows Association and Foundation, and served a six-year term, leaving in November, 2015.[22] in Washington, DC.
He continues to be an active participant in a variety of defense and national security affairs activities. He was a member of the Director of Central Intelligence’s National Security Advisory Panel at Central Intelligence Agency from 1995 to its dissolution in 2005, serving three DCI’s, James Woolsey, John Deutch, and George Tenet. In 1995, Jayne served as a senior consultant and advisor to Dr. John P. White and the Presidential Commission on Roles and Missions in the Armed Forces, taking a leadership role on a number of key issues put forth by that group. In 1996, he was appointed by President Bill Clinton to the five person Advisory Board on Arms Proliferation Policy [23]
Personal life
Randy Jayne and his wife Nancy K Jayne, reside in Webster Groves, Missouri and Sanibel, Florida. They have two adult children, Kathryn and Matthew, and two grandchildren.
Achievements/accomplishments
Defense Superior Service Medal |
Legion of Merit |
Defense Meritorious Service Medal |
Air Force Commendation Medal |
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with one device |
National Defense Service Medal |
Armed Forces Reserve Ribbon with one device |
Air Force Training Ribbon |
Republic of Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palm |
Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal |
Missouri National Guard Commendation Ribbon |
Missouri National Guard Long Service Medal |
Effective dates of promotion
Insignia | Rank | Component | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Second Lieutenant | US Air Force | June 8, 1966 | |
First Lieutenant | US Air Force | June 8, 1969 | |
Captain | US Air Force | June 8, 1973 | |
Major | US Air Force | April 26, 1977 | |
Lieutenant Colonel | Air National Guard | April 26, 1984 | |
Colonel | Air National Guard | December 18, 1992 | |
Brigadier General | Air National Guard | August 2, 1996 | |
Major General | Air National Guard | March 2, 1998 |
References
- ↑ “Board of Directors”USAFA
- 1 2 “Polaris Yearbook” United States Air Force Academy, 1966
- 1 2 “Major General E. Randolph Jayne II” National Guard Bureau, 11/15/2000
- ↑ “The ABM debate: strategic defense and national security” DSpace@MIT,1969
- ↑ “Military Awards and Decorations” National Guard Bureau
- ↑ “List of White House Fellows” Surveying America’s Leadership
- ↑ “National Archives and Records Administration” Ford Library Museum, 02/26/1998
- ↑ Survivors Guide
- ↑ Air Force Space Command
- ↑ “Congressional Record Senate” Congressional Record, 3/2/1998
- ↑ “Professional Profile” Heidrick & Struggles
- ↑ “Survivors Guide For Presidential Nominees” Political Appointee Project, 2008
- ↑ “The Daily Diary of President Jimmy Carter” The White House 10/23/1973
- ↑ International Directory of Company Histories” www.encyclopedia.com
- ↑ “Leading Practices in Executive Compensation” Heidrick & Struggles, 2005, “Making Recruitment Part of your Talent Management Process” Heidrick & Struggles, 2011
- ↑ of Directors” CAE “Edward Randolph Jayne” Bloomberg Businessweek
- ↑ “IDA Board of Trustees” IDA
- ↑ “The Endowment Welcomes Two New Founding Directors”USAFA
- ↑ “The Impact of Giving Back” The United States Air Force Academy, Endowment, May, 2012
- ↑ “National Air and Space Museum Board” Smithsonian
- ↑ “Events @nvtc” Virginia Technology Council Magazine
- ↑ “Academy honors former department head with professorship” USAFA,11/10/2010
- ↑ “Report of the Presidential Advisory Board on Arms Proliferation Policy” Federation of American Scientists, “Report of the Presidential Advisory Board on Arms Proliferation Policy” NASA,