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26   Bernie Ebbers



AP Photo/Rogelio Solis

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KING OF THE WORLDCOM
COMPANY MCI WorldCom, President and CEO
NET WORTH $1 billion
AGE 58
ADDRESS www.wcom.com
BIO Think of it as the tale of two telecommunications-company mergers--for Ebbers, it was the best of years and the worst of years. A deeply religious man as well as a legendary dealmaker, he continued to put together a telecom empire for the next millennium. As of this year, about a third of the U.S. Internet traffic flowed over MCI WorldCom's network. And the company is second only to AT&T among long-distance carriers. Perhaps best of all, the company is making its initial move into the all-important wireless world by acquiring SkyTel for $1.3 billion in stock. One of the largest paging companies, SkyTel was the first to offer two-way text messaging. At a meeting on Wall Street in June, a confident Ebbers, who was WorldCom's chief executive before it merged with MCI, affirmed rosy predictions that earnings would grow 40% this year.
After the merger in late 1997, Ebbers could do no wrong--anyway, until this August, when the company, based in Jackson, Miss., faced an embarrassing customer crisis. Part of the company's high-speed data network failed for an astonishing 10 days, causing a high-profile outage. The 3,000 business customers that were affected included Internet service providers, banks and the Chicago Board of Trade, whose after-hours trading system was one of the more notable casualties. Ebbers blamed newly installed software from Lucent, but his company was criticized for its slow reaction.
BEST LINE "I believe God has a plan for people's lives, and I believe he had a plan for me ... You'll see people who in the early days of WorldCom took their life savings and trusted this company with their money. And I have an awesome responsibility to those people to make sure that they're done right."
FORWARD TILT To avoid a backward step, Ebbers must prevent customers who lost business during the outage from going elsewhere. Then he can concentrate on offering wireless broadband services, which some analysts expect by the end of the year.

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