CarterBaldwin Executive Search is proud to partner again with Butler University in the appointment of Carol Williams as the school’s next Chief Information Officer.

A visionary and transformational technology executive with more than 25 years of experience leading enterprise-wide initiatives, Carol joins Butler from Princeton University, where she served most recently as Associate Chief Information Officer.

At Princeton, Carol led the team responsible for application development, service management, enterprise workflow, and technology service delivery. Her accomplishments include launching the university’s Enterprise Service Management program, expanding ServiceNow across academic and administrative units, modernizing desktop engineering, strengthening cybersecurity compliance, and establishing Princeton’s first customer engagement strategy.

Prior to Princeton, Carol led a technology consulting firm, advising Fortune 100 organizations on ERP transformations, process redesign, and large-scale change initiatives. Earlier in her career, she served as a Senior Manager at Deloitte, leading ERP and integration programs for global clients including Philip Morris (now part of Altria Group Inc., NYSE: MO) and Rohm and Haas (now part of Dow, NYSE: DOW).

Carol holds an MS in organizational development from American University and a BS in social sciences from the University of Maryland.

About Butler University
Located in Indianapolis, IN, Butler University is a private, nationally recognized comprehensive university encompassing seven colleges offering associate’s, bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degree options. Approximately 4,400 undergraduate and 1,000 graduate and doctoral students are enrolled at Butler, representing 48 states and 31 countries. Established in 1855 by attorney and abolitionist Ovid Butler, the university was founded on principles of inclusivity and equality, making it one of the first universities in the U.S. to admit both men and women equally and to embrace diversity regardless of race or religion.