Paul Rosenberg joined Bridgespan as a partner in the Boston office, with a strong interest in education and in organizations serving youth and the environment. He joined Bridgespan from Bain & Company, where he directed teams developing and implementing strategies in a variety of areas, focusing primarily on health care. While at Bain he led the firm's pro-bono partnership with Charlestown (Boston) High School for nine years.
Paul co-authored Bain’s work on “Innovation Imbalance” which was featured at the World Economics Forum’s Healthcare Board of Governors in Davos in 2004, and was published in The Economist and In Vivo, among others. He also led a team exploring the public policy implications of Canadian drug regulatory and pricing policies, which was broadly presented in Canada in 2004.
Prior to Bain, Paul served as special counsel to the United States Department of State, where he oversaw a review of all assistance programs to the former Soviet Union. From 1993 to 1995, he served as senior adviser to Commerce Secretary Ronald H. Brown, coordinating all international trade issues for the secretary; he also managed the 1984 US Senate campaign of then-Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor John F. Kerry. He entered government and campaign service from McKinsey & Company, where he was an associate and then engagement manager.
In addition, Paul has been a senior executive and partner in two Massachusetts companies: he was vice president for product development of Grand Circle Travel, a direct marketer of travel and financial services to Americans over 60, and executive vice president and partner in Kensington Investment Company, which acquired and managed six office buildings in the Boston area.
Paul's nonprofit volunteer activity includes service on the board of directors of the Germaine Lawrence School, a residential facility for troubled adolescents, and six years on the board of advisers of the Hurricane Island Outward Bound School.
Paul is an honors graduate of Harvard College, Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School, and is a member of the Massachusetts and Federal bars.
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