Personnel: Mark Shmulevich was appointed Deputy Minister of Telecom and Mass Communications - another performer. Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications of Russia: Alexey Volin, Denis Sverdlov, Mark Shmulevich

Chief Strategic and Operations Director of Acronis

"Biography"

Mr. Shmulevich joined the company in 2014 and oversees its global technological development, including cooperation with universities and research centers, the creation of new development centers, and innovative projects.

"Companies"

"News"

Deputy Minister of Communications Shmulevich leaves the post of his own free will

Mark Shmulevich is called to supervise the IT direction in the Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications

Communications Minister Nikolai Nikiforov has found a deputy who will oversee IT. This is Mark Shmulevich, who was previously involved in space and quantum technologies.
link: http://www.vedomosti.ru/ career/news/2260498/ tehnologichnyj_chinovnik

Mark Shmulevich and Denis Sverdlov received the posts of deputy head of the Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications

Mark Shmulevich, who previously headed the business development department of JSC Russian Space Systems (RCS), has been appointed deputy head of the Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications, the government press service reported on July 6.
link: http://www.jewish.ru/news/cis/2012/07/news994309150.php

Medvedev Appoints 29-Year-Old GLONASS Expert as Deputy Minister of Communications

Mark Shmulevich, who previously worked at the Russian Space Systems Corporation, became Deputy Head of the Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications.
link: http://www.cnews.ru/top/2012/07/06/medvedev

The lecture of the Nobel laureate was moderated by the head of the Russian Quantum Center project Mark Shmulevich. The Russian Quantum Center is a unique international research project and one of the most promising centers for fundamental science in Russia, funded by the Skolkovo Foundation.
link: http://www.favor.com.ua/blogs/6630.html

Our quantum physics will be funded like in Princeton

The endowment fund will be legally formalized in February. We have already received results on its content, - said Mark Shmulevich, Development Director of the RCC. - The money that donors contribute to the fund is not an investment, but a contribution without the expectation of direct profit. With these funds, we will be able to ensure the work of the RCC in the long term.
link: http://pedsovet.org/content/view/15111/249/

Why do Russian scientists prefer to work in Europe?

Guest: Evgeny Onishchenko, Research Fellow, Lebedev Physics Institute Russian Academy sciences; Mark Shmulevich, Project Manager of the Russian Quantum Center; Ilya Kolmanovsky, teacher of biology at the Lyceum "Second School", candidate of biological sciences.
link: http://finam.fm/archive-view/5041/3/

The Russian Quantum Center enlisted the support of the Nobel laureate in the search for personnel

The visit to Russia of the laureate ended Nobel Prize in Physics and Member of the Board of Trustees of the Russian Quantum Center David Gross. The visit of David Gross took place within the framework of the Festival of World Ideas, where the professor gave a lecture "The Future of Modern Physics" in the Lecture Hall of the Polytechnic Museum. The lecture of the Nobel laureate was moderated by the head of the Russian Quantum Center project Mark Shmulevich.
link: http://ipresscom.ru/taxonomy/term/15931

Superuniversity is being created in Skolkovo

This issue was raised at the meeting of the commission by Mark Shmulevich, project manager of the International Center for Quantum Optics and Quantum Technologies. The Russian Quantum Center, which received a certificate from the Skolkovo participant, should become one of the world's leading centers in this most complex area of ​​physics. When recruiting staff, the center was faced with the fact that the world's leading scientists are in no hurry to join the project without receiving long-term financial guarantees for their research.
link: http://top.oprf.ru/main/5208. html

IT Park hosted a meeting on cooperation with the Russian Quantum Center and Parallels

Today, November 25, a meeting on cooperation in the field of high technologies between Tatarstan, the Russian Quantum Center and Parallels was held in the Kazan IT Park. Nikolai Nikiforov, Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Tatarstan - Minister of Informatization and Communications of the Republic of Tatarstan, Alexander Tormasov, Parallels Research Development Director, and Mark Shmulevich, Director and Deputy Director of the IT Park, took part in the discussion of possible prospects for cooperation Dinar Nasyrov and Ramil Ibragimov.
link: http://www.itpark-kazan.ru/ru/ 3221

David Gross visited the Russian Quantum Center

The visit of David Gross took place within the framework of the Festival of Global Ideas, at one or another doctor delivered a lecture "The Future of Modern Physics" in the Lecture Hall of the Polytechnic Museum. The lecture of the Nobel laureate was moderated by Mark Shmulevich, manager of the Russian Quantum Center project.
link: http://auto-palac.com.ua/?p=933

“Protection against a chemical threat requires fundamentally new technologies”: interview with the head of the Security Department environment and Natural Resources Management of the Administration of the Tambov Region Nadezhda Petrova

About the details of the participation of the Russian Research Institute of Space Instrumentation in the project of the federal automated monitoring system for critical objects and especially dangerous goods, which is being developed in Tambov, Mark Shmulevich, an employee of the RNII KP, told a REGNUM correspondent:

“In a nutshell, the Russian Research Institute of Space Instrumentation (RNII KP) offers the regions a regional navigation system, which includes a control and correction station, information transmission segments and high-precision positioning of objects.

A similar project has already been implemented in the Yaroslavl region. And now we offer a positioning system (analogous to GPS - global satellite positioning system), which allows you to specify the location of mobile objects, send commands to them, transfer information about these objects to electronic maps.
link:

Another deputy. for Mr. Nikiforov: Mark Shmulevich (others - ).

This appointee is 29 years old.

Mark Shmulevich will be engaged in the satellite direction? Or international cooperation?

The next appointment clarifies the picture I have of what is happening. To make it convenient for Nikiforov to work, he and the team are going to be about the same age. No experience with the "scoop". Understandable "Washington Regional Committee" people. (I saw under one of the news on the topic of appointment the comment "I think, or is Russia occupied by someone? That is, some people have such thoughts). With experience working as performers. And, as I fear, without a strategic vision of the "picture" of the industry, development trends. If diligent performers are gathered, this is normal. But who will be at the real helm, where will the instructions for the "Timurovites" come from?

Next in line is another rumored appointment - Timur Yakubov, he is tipped to be in the IT direction. It is known that Nikiforov is familiar with Timur on business.

In total, Nikiforov has the right to recruit 7 deputies according to the regulations on the Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications. Waiting for information about three more young people? However, no, according to rumors, the former deputies - Alexander Malinin and Alexei Maslov may remain Nikiforov "inherited" from Shchegolev. It is still not clear whether Nahum Marder will eventually leave or whether Nikiforov will prefer to have someone really knowledgeable about the topic at hand.

Ilya Massukh no longer works at the Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications since July 3, 2012, he left "of his own free will." Alexander Malinin may also follow him. Alexey Maslov, it seems, has not yet expressed a desire to leave. That is, while it is reliably known about three new swings, 1-3 may remain "inheritance", 1 candidate is rumored to be waiting for approval.

Ministry Nikolai Nikiforov as of 07/06/2012:

  1. Alexey Volin
  2. Denis Sverdlov
  3. Mark Shmulevich
  4. Alexey Maslov (probably will stay)
  5. Alexander Malinin (may leave)
  6. Naum Marder (may leave)
  7. Timur Yakubov (under approval)
  8. Ilya Massukh (out)
Sources:

The head of the Ministry of Communications of Russia, Nikolay Nikiforov, introduced the new deputy ministers: Alexei Volin, Denis Sverdlov and Mark Shmulevich. Deputy Minister Naum Marder plans to leave the ministry.

Alexey Volin will be responsible for the state policy in the field of media, Denis Sverdlov - in the communications industry, and Mark Shmulevich will develop information technologies. “A lot is expected of us, but time is short,” said Nikolai Nikiforov.

Volin Alexey Konstantinovich. Born on January 31, 1964 in the city of Leningrad. Since 1967 lives in Moscow.

1981 - 1986 - Institute of Asian and African countries at Moscow State University. Lomonosov. Specialty by diploma - historian-orientalist, referent translator of the Indonesian language

1986 - 1989 - junior editor-in-training, junior editor, editor, senior editor of the United Edition South-East Asia Editorial Asia Press Agency NEWS (APN)

1990 - 1991 - Deputy Head of the APN Bureau in Jakarta (Indonesia) in the status of Deputy Head of the Information Department of the USSR Embassy in Indonesia

1992 - 1996 - Editor, Special Correspondent, First Deputy General Director of the General Directorate of Information of the Russian News Agency NOVOSTI (since 1995 - Member of the Board)

1996 - Head of the TV channel "Business Russia" (created jointly by the All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company, RIA Novosti and Video International)

1996 - 1998 - Head of the Media Department, First Deputy Head of the Public Relations Department of the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation (Active State Counselor of the second class)

1998 - Head of the Department of Government Information of the Office of the Government of the Russian Federation (Kiriyenko Government)

1998 - 2000 - Chairman of the Board of RIA Novosti (at the same time, First Deputy Chairman of the All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company). In 1999 - participation in the organization of the Rosinformtsentr to coordinate information and propaganda work in the Chechen direction (Created on behalf of V.V. Putin). Rosinformtsentr was organized on the basis of RIA Novosti

2000 - 2003 - Deputy Head of the Government Office of the Russian Federation, in charge of media, PR, culture, education, sports and tourism. (Active State Councilor First Class)

2003 - Organizer of the group for the creation of the information service "MEDIOLOGIA"

2003 - 2007 - President of the Rodionov Publishing House (magazines "Profile", "Company", "Business Week", website Point.ru)

2007 – 2008 – General manager film company AMEDIA.

2008 - 2010 - Individual producer activity. Together with AMEDIA, five historical multi-part films were produced for Channel One (“The Marshal’s Conspiracy”, “The Promised Land from Joseph Stalin”, “... and Shepilov who joined them”, “One Step From the Third World War”, “Informed Source in Moscow”)

2011 - 2012 - President of A3 LLC.

2009 - present time - Deputy Chairman of the Public Council at Rospechat and Deputy Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Institute for Advanced Studies of Television and Radio Workers.

In February 2012, he was included in the working group on open government issues.

In 1997, he was awarded the title "Honorary Radio Operator of the Russian Federation" for organizing radio messages from the President of the Russian Federation B.N. Yeltsin

Gratitude of the President of the Russian Federation in 1997, 1998 and 2012
Gratitude of the Chairman of the Government in 2002

Sverdlov Denis Lvovich. Born in 1978 in St. Petersburg.

1995-2000 - St. Petersburg State University of Engineering and Economics, specialty "Accounting and audit".

1995 - system administrator of the plant "Metiz"

1997 - consultant for the implementation of ERP systems of the company "MKD" St. Petersburg

2000 - organized his own company for the implementation of ERP systems IT Vison

2003 - after the merger of IT Vision and Corus Consulting, became the managing partner of the merged company. Managed projects to optimize business processes and implement IT systems (document management, ERP, electronic document interchange systems, BI analytical systems, budgeting, system integration) for the largest companies in industries retail(Metro, Central Department Store), telecom (Svyazinvest, Main Radio Frequency Center of the Russian Federation), finance, logistics, construction, transport.

2007 - headed the YOTA company (Skartel LLC).

In July 2012, he was appointed Deputy Minister of Communications and Mass Media of the Russian Federation.

Additional Information:

Married since 1998.

He is raising two daughters and a son.

1997 - Tenafly College, USA. Internship.

1999 - 2005 - MIPT. Master, Applied Mathematics and Physics. Diploma with honors.

2003 - Russian School of Economics (NES).

2005 - Eindoven University of Technology, The Netherlands. Internship.

2005 - 2009 - Postgraduate studies at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT). Ph.D.

2007 - 2008 - Consultant at Gradient CJSC. Company profile: Gradient CJSC is a group of companies focused on providing a wide range services in the innovation and venture sphere, including management consulting. Area of ​​responsibility: development of the concept for the creation and development of the Nagatino i-Land technopark; participation in the development of corporate strategy.

2005 - 2009 - Project Manager at the Multifunctional Navigation and Information Center (MNIC) of the Federal State Unitary Enterprise RNII KP. Company profile: Federal State Unitary Enterprise RNII KP is the leading enterprise of the Russian space industry for the creation, development and intended use of the GLONASS system, satellite systems, ground control systems, remote sensing of the Earth (ERS). Area of ​​responsibility: international cooperation; project management; analytics on the Russian and foreign markets for equipment and services in the field of navigation, communications, remote sensing.

2009 – 2011 – Head of the Business Development Department at JSC Russian Space Systems. Company profile: JSC Russian Space Systems is a leading diversified corporation in the space industry in Russia, specializing in the development, manufacture, author's support and operation of space information systems, including the GLONASS system. Area of ​​responsibility: business development; the international cooperation; building partnerships. Projects in the field of satellite navigation, satellite communications, broadband access.

2010 - 2012 - Founder, member of the board of directors of Rusnavgeoset LLC. Company profile: LLC Rusnavgeoset is a joint venture between Trimble Navigation, Ltd. (USA) and OJSC Russian Space Systems on the creation and implementation of a modern innovative infrastructure for high-precision satellite positioning in Russia and the CIS countries. The first joint venture between Russia and the United States in the field of satellite navigation. Area of ​​responsibility: strategy; access to regional and corporate markets; control.

2011 - 2012 - Development Director, Member of the Management Committee of LLC Russian Quantum Center. Company profile: The Russian Quantum Center (RQC) is a new international research institute in Russia that conducts research in the field of quantum technologies. Examples of potential results of RCC research are absolutely secure communication channels, new materials, ultra-precise clocks for navigation systems, elements of quantum computers. The RCC attracts foreign scientists to Russia and works in close cooperation with both Russian and foreign research centers and universities, as well as venture funds. Area of ​​responsibility: management of the center (all aspects of creation and development).

In July 2012, he was appointed Deputy Minister of Communications and Mass Media of the Russian Federation.

Additional Information:

Experience in working and interacting with venture funds in the fields of IT and high technologies, startups.

World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Shaper - 2012; member of the working group of the organizing committee of the Youth Forum within the SPIEF-2011, 2012; McKinsey Business Case Competition winner; two-time scholarship holder of the program of the V. Potanin Foundation; Winner of Yandex Research Grant Program.

Potok's editors visited the Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications of the Russian Federation and interviewed Mark Shmulevich, a graduate of the Russian Economic School of Physics and Technology, former director of development of the Russian Quantum Center, and now Deputy Minister of Communications of the Russian Federation.
Since the conversation turned out to be very long, and the interview turned out to be very voluminous, it was decided to break it into 2 parts.
Actually, we are proud to present the first part of the interview to you!

Good afternoon, Mark Mikhailovich. To be honest, it is not so easy to find information about you: at what faculty did you study, department, about your student life.

I studied at FUPM, and in general my life was mainly connected with applied mathematics. Entering the Institute of Physics and Technology, I thought that I would study mathematics. The departments were different, but the main one was the Computing Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences on Akademicheskaya, where the 971st group studied. There we studied data processing methods, Artificial Intelligence. My master's work, and then my Ph.D. thesis, was in the field of text mining: processing large arrays of textual information, extracting meanings. I am from Moscow, I was born there, I lived there, I spent all my childhood in Konkovo, which, by Moscow standards, is not so far from Moscow State University. When I was choosing which university to study at, Moscow State University, Phystech, and MEPhI were among the options. Most people told me: “You probably won’t see the difference, but the closest is Moscow State University, so go there.” Nevertheless, I went to Fiztekh, because there was a feeling that still in Russia no one has surpassed Fiztekh in how to teach a person to think and give him really fundamental knowledge, regardless of the market situation and what is happening around. The feeling of the parents, first of all. And now I do not regret that I traveled for an hour and a half in one direction every day.

That is, you did not live in a hostel at all?

Most of the time, no, but there was a period when I tried. By the way, the hostel was not FUPM, but RTshnaya. During this time, new friends appeared, but almost all the time I studied, I still traveled from home.

During your studies, did you take part in public life? Discos, KVN, STEMs, Physics Days?

Yes, I took part, but less than the average physicist. He took part in the Days of Physics, was very fond of STEMs, although he had never been on stage. It so happened that for me Phystech became, first of all, the place where I studied. The social component, Phystech as a hangout, Phystech as a place where you spend your free time, largely passed me by. My school was such a place for me. I studied at a strong physical and mathematical school (ed. note - Gymnasium in the South-West No. 1543), as schoolchildren we actively went on hikes, and participated in KVN, staged performances. When I got to Phystech, this connection with the school remained. In fact, with the same school company, even with the same teachers, we continued to go on hikes (and several of my friends from physics and technology began to go with us). This part of my life remained in Moscow more, in Moscow there were parents, friends and girls. The replacement of the culture that was, with the Fiztekhov one, did not happen - only as an addition.

Some of the organizational initiatives come from the students, and some from the administration. From the height of your experience, in what situations do private initiatives lead to success, and when do they need to be initiated by the administration? Where is that edge, where is that balance?

If the initiative is not supported by business, graduates, and this initiative does not concern something that is built purely administratively, then it has little chance of success. On average, initiatives proposed by students and graduates, I think, will have more chances. And if this initiative is worked out with a large number of people, the risk that no one will need it is removed. Unfortunately, there are enough unnecessary initiatives.

Unfortunately, the views of students and administration on what should be carried out and how to do it do not always coincide. Students obviously want to do good for students, and the administration has its own opinion on this matter.

It's bad when there are such inconsistencies. I am always for the initiative of students, just as I am for the initiative of graduates. There were many examples around. When I studied at the Fiztekh, the trade union committee allocated tickets for cultural events, probably, and now allocates ...

Oh sure.

I remember the moment when several guys got together, discussed that tickets were given for strange events, they clearly understood where they wanted to go, suggested this to the trade union committee, and they were given these tickets, they said thanks for their activity. The simplest example of how bottom-up initiative works. Usually, if such obvious things work easily, then more serious initiatives find an addressee. It’s a pity if the channel for supporting student initiatives does not work well at Phystech today, but maybe this is an excellent occasion and an example of what student or alumni associations, which, as far as I heard, can change.

We will return to the alumni association, but now I propose to continue talking about education. There is an item in your biography about an internship abroad, how difficult was it then to leave?

The first internship was when I was in high school at school. And it was she who I remember most of all, because at that moment she gave a lot of things. Before that, I had never been abroad for a long time, and suddenly I got into high school on an exchange program for a few months American school. He lived in the family of a schoolboy from a small town near New Jersey, who later came to my family in the same way, and I took him to our school. This exchange of cultural experience is absolutely invaluable. He gave me two things: one is long-term, the other is more practical, but I consider both important. The long-term thing is understanding that the world is big, there are very different cultures, different approaches and you should try not to look at things from only one point of view. A practical thing is a quick and intensive study in English. There was almost no one to speak Russian with, except perhaps on the phone with my parents from home. Therefore, I had no other choice but to speak English: I wanted to be on a par with everyone in the company.

During my studies at the Phystech, there were several trips, but I rather organized them myself, participating in various competitions and selections. For example, there were events called Student Week, student week. In fact, they went for more than a week and there were quite a lot of them. There was a whole culture of participation in such events, forums, student organizations that help organize such exchanges. So I passed the selection and went to Eindhoven, to Holland. There we devoted part of the time to the fact that in groups with students from different countries, with various biographies, humanitarians and techies, discussed global world problems that somehow affect each of the countries. The other part of the time, quite a lot, we spent at the university. It was the Technical University of Eindhoven. I looked at how a university works in another country: how they teach there, what kind of students there are, how they think they teach. It was also useful for the outlook.

You said that you discussed with people from different countries some global problems. Do points of view on them strongly coincide in different countries?

Differently. They selected people with an active lifestyle. I remember, for example, that one of the topics was about the development of nuclear energy: whether humanity needs to develop it further, or is it better to switch to something else as soon as possible. There were heated debates on this issue. On the flanks there were people from countries where, at that time, demonstrations had just recently taken place against the opening of new nuclear power plants, against the disposal of nuclear waste on the territory of the country (in my opinion, the Austrian guys were especially active), and from countries where, on the contrary, they had just built the first nuclear power plants - the image and PR of the peaceful atom in those countries was positive, for them this is a shift, a move forward, towards a new energy. When these atnipod people clashed, it was hot.

Go on an internship or go to study at a foreign university. Pros, cons?

There are many advantages, but everyone chooses for himself. People are much more likely to regret not doing something than what they did. Over time, with the intensification of globalization, the decision to leave to study becomes not a decision of a lifetime, but simply a stage, albeit an important one. There are more of those who leave, then to another place, at some point they arrive. If a few decades ago, for the inhabitants of our country, leaving was equal to emigration, but today this is not the case. For many people involved in international activities, it is often difficult to say where they live more. There are such examples among scientists and entrepreneurs.

As far as students are concerned, psychology is more important. Many physics and technical institutes have already come a long way, they came from a distant city to Moscow, and for them this became an important stage, and here is the next one right away. Most need to get used to it. For a small number of guys, Moscow is initially a trampoline further, they immediately aim to go abroad after the 4th year.

Have you ever thought about leaving Russia?

Were. I thought that I would still do science, and was guided by a career as a university professor or researcher in a company. At that moment, it seemed to me that this was the life path that was interesting to me and suited me well. You are constantly discovering something new, communicating with highly intelligent people.

So yes, there were such thoughts, but for various reasons, including personal ones, then I didn’t leave anywhere. And then it turned out that I quickly started working as a researcher at a research institute. Internally, the SRI has already moved from research to management and business development. The question is what for the maximum professional development be sure to leave, stopped standing. There was a drive around, and my work was 2/3 connected with international cooperation, I was constantly in an international environment.

Don't you regret?

Can't compare two different lives. It seems to me that it would be nice either way, a person usually finds arguments for himself with any choice that his life is good, this happens in the subcortex. When I look back and think about some of the forks in my life, I almost always think I made a good decision. But, most likely, if I had made a different decision, then I would have arranged my life in such a way that even then it would be very good. Man is much stronger than he might think. He decides. And it determines to a much greater extent how he will perceive his life and what this life will be like than external conditions.

It's like in Steve Jobs' speech - Connecting the dots looking backward

Yes exactly. In addition, it seems to me important not to limit yourself in the possibilities of experimenting with your life. Rarely do you immediately understand where the calling is. Few of the guys with whom I had the most contact during my years of study at the Physicotechnical Institute are now doing what they planned. A person should not be afraid to try one thing, another, the third. You yourself always feel where you are more happy, where you are less. Is it yours or not. So gradually, over several iterations, you come to something, sometimes you return to the beginning, but already consciously. That is, you have to leave, change your professional life. This, by the way, you need to learn, it's difficult. Do not regret leaving, breaking up, saying no.

Interviewed by Alexander Pavlov

1997 - Tenafly College, USA. Internship.

1999 - 2005 - MIPT. Master, Applied Mathematics and Physics. Diploma with honors.

2003 - Russian School of Economics (NES).

2005 - Eindoven University of Technology, Netherlands. Internship.

2005 - 2009 - Postgraduate study at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT). Ph.D.

2007 - 2008 - Consultant at Gradient CJSC. Company profile: Gradient CJSC is a group of companies focused on providing a wide range of services in the innovation and venture sector, including management consulting. Area of ​​responsibility: development of the concept for the creation and development of the Nagatino i-Land technopark; participation in the development of corporate strategy.

2005 - 2009 - Project Manager at the Multifunctional Navigation and Information Center (MNIC) of the Federal State Unitary Enterprise RNII KP. Company profile: Federal State Unitary Enterprise RNII KP is the leading enterprise of the Russian space industry for the creation, development and intended use of the GLONASS system, satellite systems, ground control systems, remote sensing of the Earth (ERS). Area of ​​responsibility: international cooperation; project management; analytics on the Russian and foreign markets for equipment and services in the field of navigation, communications, remote sensing.

2009 - 2011 - Head of the Business Development Department at JSC Russian Space Systems. Company Profile: JSC "Russian Space Systems" is a leading diversified corporation in the Russian space industry, specializing in the development, manufacture, author's support and operation of space information systems, including the GLONASS system. Area of ​​responsibility: business development; the international cooperation; building partnerships. Projects in the field of satellite navigation, satellite communications, broadband access.

2010 - 2012 - Founder, member of the board of directors of Rusnavgeoset LLC. Company profile: Rusnavgeoset LLC is a joint venture between Trimble Navigation, Ltd. (USA) and OJSC Russian Space Systems on the creation and implementation of a modern innovative infrastructure for high-precision satellite positioning in Russia and the CIS countries. The first joint venture between Russia and the United States in the field of satellite navigation. Area of ​​responsibility: strategy; access to regional and corporate markets; control.

2011 - 2012 - Development Director, Member of the Management Committee of LLC Russian Quantum Center. Company profile: The Russian Quantum Center (RQC) is a new international research institute in Russia, conducting research in the field of quantum technologies. Examples of potential results of RCC research are absolutely secure communication channels, new materials, ultra-precise clocks for navigation systems, elements of quantum computers. The RCC attracts foreign scientists to Russia and works in close cooperation with both Russian and foreign research centers and universities, as well as venture funds. Area of ​​responsibility: management of the center (all aspects of creation and development).

In July 2012, he was appointed Deputy Minister of Communications and Mass Media of the Russian Federation.

Additional Information:

Experience in working and interacting with venture funds in the fields of IT and high technologies, startups.

World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Shaper - 2012; member of the working group of the organizing committee of the Youth Forum within the SPIEF-2011, 2012; McKinsey Business Case Competition winner; two-time scholarship holder of the program of the V. Potanin Foundation; Winner of Yandex Research Grant Program.

Languages: English, French.

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