STI Management for the past six years. STI is a talent management firm that represents senior executives in media, entertainment and technology firms and offers them strategic insights to increase their
success in corporations and startups alike. While client identities are confidential, they include top executives with Discovery, Disney / ABC, Conde Nast, eBay, Facebook, Fox, The Gap, Google, Intuit, Mattel,
NASCAR, National Geographic, NBC/Universal, News Corp., PepsiCo, Revver, Rodale, Sony/BMG, Time Warner, Veoh, Viacom, Virgin Entertainment, Vivendi and Yahoo!. At STI, he helped grow the firm
from one to six partners in six U.S. cities, resulting in substantial revenue increases each year. He also guided several entrepreneurs through the startup process, from inception to profitability. An early
Internet adopter, Adam started as a Special Projects producer for The Los Angeles Times New Media Group and helped launch the latimes.com website before becoming Director of Internet Production for Universal
Studios, then built a corporate Intranet for DreamWorks S.K.G. Subsequently, he was the Director of Emerging Technology at VWR Scientific Products Corp., before becoming Executive Vice President of
E-Commerce at a Young & Rubicam subsidiary. After serving as the founding Chief International E-Commerce Officer of American International Group, he was named Chief Global E-Commerce Officer of
Deloitte Consulting. Subsequently, he was appointed Chairman and CEO of IsoSpace, a web-based enterprise video collaboration software company. As an established Internet and technology expert, Adam is
frequently called upon to address professional and academic audiences, including the Princeton Alumni Association of New York City. Adam was appointed to the Board of Visitors at the Peter F. Drucker Graduate
School of Management, Claremont Graduate University, and has also served on the Board of Directors of Connected Media Technologies, Inc., a publicly traded company. His article, "More Companies Are
Routing Calls via Internet," was recently published in The New York Times. Earlier in his career, Adam oversaw production of five feature films as an executive for the Motion Picture Corporation of America and was a staff writer for the Los Angeles Times, where he reported several front page stories, hundreds of articles, and was a member of the editorial staff that shared the 1995 Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the earthquake on January 17th, 1994 in Northridge, California. Adam holds both an MFA degree from the Peter Stark Motion Picture
Producing Program and an MBA from the University of Southern California. He is also a graduate of the California State University Long Beach school of Radio and Television. |