Mark E. Tippery has been hired by Pinstripe Healthcare to serve as director of client services. Tippery is responsible for fulfilling and expanding client relationships. In this position, he oversees account strategy, drives the fulfillment of all deliverables and manages account teams tasked with delivering end-to-end talent acquisition services, including passive sourcing and onboarding.
“Mark is a welcome addition to the team. A proven HR leader with broad industry experience, Mark is a big-picture, strategic thinker known for his ability to realize his vision through tactical implementation,” commented Executive Vice President Erin Lange. “Through his varied HR leadership experience he brings to Pinstripe a diverse set of industry best practices that fit well across the entire organization,” she emphasized.
Previously, Tippery worked for Hewitt Associates (now Aon Hewitt), as a senior service delivery manager. During his tenure with Hewitt, he worked in talent acquisition and client management with such accounts as Bank of Montreal, Harris Bank and Air Canada where he led a team of managers and more than 120 extended associates to provide outsourced recruiting support. Prior to Hewitt, Mark served as the human resource director for TAP Pharmaceutical, a $4 billion joint venture between Abbott and Takeda of Japan.
Mary Jane Jamar, GPHR, has been appointed chief human resource officer by the Internal Rescue Committee (IRC).
Jamar has 25 years of experience in the management of human resources at nonprofit organizations. She joins the IRC from Management Sciences for Health, the international public health organization based in Cambridge, Mass., where she had been vice president for human resources. Before joining Management Sciences for Health in 2006, she was vice president for human resources and facilities at the World Wildlife Fund.
Jamar holds a master of arts in human resource management from the George Washington University and a bachelor of arts degree from Mount Holyoke College. The International Rescue Committee, founded in 1933 at the request of Albert Einstein, carries out humanitarian relief and development work in over 40 countries and resettles refugees in the United States through a network of offices in 22 cities.