Aimbridge Hospitality Appoints Thomas Song CFO
Aimbridge Hospitality, a leading multinational hospitality management company, announced the appointment of Thomas Song as chief financial officer. Thomas Song will succeed Judy Hendrick, who has announced her retirement for the first half of 2021 after 13 years as CFO of Aimbridge. Hendrick will continue to support Aimbridge in a consulting capacity working with Executive Chairman Dave Johnson on transformational growth projects.
As a member of the Executive Team, Song will be responsible for leading Aimbridge s overall financial management and driving the Company s financial strategies. He will also play an integral leadership role in guiding data driven investment and business development strategies.
Brian Chen, Tariro Mzezewa, Ceylan Yeginsu, Elaine Glusac and Sarah Firshein, The New York Times
Published: 30 Dec 2020 05:01 PM BdST
Updated: 31 Dec 2020 12:23 PM BdST Passengers aboard the World Dream on a “cruise to nowhere” watch a movie at an open air screening in Singapore, Nov. 19, 2020. The New York Times
The travel world has been on a roller coaster in 2020. Even as vaccination campaigns started in the United States and Europe, countries slammed shut their borders to visitors from the United Kingdom, because of a new strain of the coronavirus. And while the number of people flying in the United States is again on the rise topping 1 million a day on the weekend before Christmas a patchwork of quarantine and testing regulations remains in place in many parts of the country.
Brian Chen, Tariro Mzezewa, Ceylan Yeginsu, Elaine Glusac and Sarah Firshein, The New York Times
Published: 30 Dec 2020 05:01 PM BdST
Updated: 31 Dec 2020 12:23 PM BdST Passengers aboard the World Dream on a “cruise to nowhere” watch a movie at an open air screening in Singapore, Nov. 19, 2020. The New York Times
The travel world has been on a roller coaster in 2020. Even as vaccination campaigns started in the United States and Europe, countries slammed shut their borders to visitors from the United Kingdom, because of a new strain of the coronavirus. And while the number of people flying in the United States is again on the rise topping 1 million a day on the weekend before Christmas a patchwork of quarantine and testing regulations remains in place in many parts of the country.