Subscribe to the Teradata Blog

Get the latest industry news, technology trends, and data science insights each week.



I consent that Teradata Corporation, as provider of this website, may occasionally send me Teradata Marketing Communications emails with information regarding products, data analytics, and event and webinar invitations. I understand that I may unsubscribe at any time by following the unsubscribe link at the bottom of any email I receive.

Your privacy is important. Your personal information will be collected, stored, and processed in accordance with the Teradata Global Privacy Policy.

It's a small world after all

It's a small world after all

Just a few days ago I had the honor of representing Teradata at Ethisphere’s “World’s Most Ethical Companies” celebration in New York City, an event at which Teradata won its NINTH consecutive WMEC award in just its tenth year of existence.  The dominant message on the evening was this: For a company that is a true world leader, corporate ethics begins not with the law — the litany of rules and regulations it must follow to stay out of trouble — but rather with a sense of corporate values, modeled from the top, that include an awareness of the impact its business and behaviors are having on the people, the communities, and the other companies whom it influences.  For me, there is nothing profound in this mantra.  It is a simple restatement, in the corporate context, of the Golden Rule: “Goodness” comes in treating the people around you in the manner you hope they’ll treat you.

I believe firmly in the Golden Rule.  I believe putting it to practice requires not just an awareness of the people around us, but an empathy and willingness to serve them as well.  And I believe, for purposes of my own life, the “people around me” are to be defined very broadly, like the ocean is to a trickling stream: My service begins with the immediate community and flows out to the (rapidly shrinking) world from there.


Screen-Shot-2018-03-23-at-8-44-28-AM.png



For the twenty years we’ve lived in San Diego, my family & I have drawn our service inspiration from two organizations — the SD-based charity Friends & Family Community Connection (FFCC), and our faith community at St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal Church in the suburb of Poway.  FFCC began more than 20 years ago by providing after-school programs and meal assistance to under-privileged families in the Poway school system. It has since become a far-reaching international organization that provides disaster & hunger relief, academic & agricultural education programs, and youth & educational facilities both domestically and in many countries around the world.  FFCC has a particularly strong presence in the nations of Tanzania and Haiti, where it has built on-going programs and relationships with several rural communities since 2007 and 2010, respectively. My (now grown) kids and I collectively made eight trips to Tanzania and Haiti with FFCC over a six-year period.  Teradata itself has supported the work of FFCC with cash donations and paid volunteer time toward many of the 130+ food-packing events FFCC has hosted in San Diego and around the USA.

More recently, I have made two trips to the remote rural village of Lauranette, Haiti (leading a group of high-school students there in August 2017), where St. Bartholomew’s has partnered with local community elders to fund and construct a six-classroom school building that educates and feeds 300 children every day of the school year.  Just three miles from the Dominican border, Lauranette has absorbed an influx of people displaced by political conflict from their Dominican homes over the last three years, leaving many kids in the village with no place in the small, severely underfunded, makeshift public school there.  The new building also serves as a community center and, we learned when Hurricane Irma struck Haiti’s north coast in Summer 2017, a reliable shelter for up to 200 villagers in even the most violent weather conditions. The school is the first (and to-date the only completed) permanent structure in the Lauranette community.


Pic3-2-769x1024.jpg

I am proud to work for Teradata. It develops and sells world-class products and services and does so with world-class values and purpose (recognized now nine years running). And it encourages and supports its associates, like me, as we live out the Golden Rule both in our local communities and elsewhere on the globe in our own individual professional and personal lives.
 
John David Cowart has served as Law Vice President, Chief Intellectual Property Counsel, since Teradata’s inception in 2007. In his 25th year of patent practice, John worked previously at the largest IP-specialty firm in the country, Fish & Richardson P.C., and at NCR Corporation. John also serves as adjunct professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in downtown San Diego, where he teaches evening courses in IP law and mentors students in its legal-aid clinics. John and his wife of 28 years, Christine, have two adult children – a son who recently graduated from Cal Poly Pomona, and a daughter who will graduate from the University of Cincinnati’s School of Design, Art, Architecture & Planning (DAAP) in 2019. John is an avid traveler and splits his vacation time among trips with and to visit his kids, scuba diving in the Caribbean, and humanitarian-aid travel both domestically and abroad. Over the last several years John has traveled to Tanzania and Haiti twice each with organizations that build permanent relationships in rural communities by seeding educational, food-independence, and shelter-construction programs there. John has also traveled to Houston to assist with Hurricane Harvey rebuilding efforts.
Portrait of Teradata

(Author):
Teradata

Teradata is the connected multi-cloud data platform for enterprise analytics company. Our enterprise analytics solve business challenges from start to scale. Only Teradata gives you the flexibility to handle the massive and mixed data workloads of the future, today. Learn more at Teradata.com. 

View all posts by Teradata

Turn your complex data and analytics into answers with Teradata Vantage.

Contact us