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Eric Bing
Eric Bing
01:15

Eric Bing

The College of Health Care Professions

Santa Fe, NM USA

"Careers don’t have to be for life. There are so many different routes."

Career Roadmap

Eric's work combines: Entrepreneurship, Education, and Helping People

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Day In The Life

CEO

I lead organizations with an emphasis on education, healthcare human capital and workforce training.

My Day to Day

As CEO, I lead nine allied health colleges across Texas and one online college. The College of Health Care Professions currently holds 3800 students and 540 employees. We've increased enrollment by over 80% and are now the largest provider of allied health graduates to Texas.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

My father wanted me to become an engineer because of the stability and success the career provides. I ended up hating my engineering classes and was miserable at school, so I switched my major. I didn't tell my family that I had switched for a while, but when I did confess, they were supportive of my new route. I did end up keeping engineering as a minor, however.

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Marketing/Marketing Management, General

    Southern Methodist University

  • Graduate Degree

    International Finance

    Thunderbird School of Global Management

Life & Career Milestones

My path in life has been direct

  • 1.

    I come from a long line of educators—my mom’s side of the family are all educators, dating back to the 1800s, but I never thought I would also end up working in the educational field.

  • 2.

    Throughout childhood, my father urged me to be an engineer, so I went into college intending to major in engineering...but ended up hating it.

  • 3.

    During my sophomore year, I dropped my entire course schedule and switched to a business degree—I still minored in engineering.

  • 4.

    My first career job was with Huckaby and Associates, a firm that provides financial, management, and governmental consulting services—one of our clients was former President George H.W. Bush.

  • 5.

    I went back to school to get my MBA in international finance at ASU’s Thunderbird School of Global Management—I continue to maintain relationships with fellow Thunderbird graduates around the world.

  • 6.

    Through one of my entrepreneurial endeavors, I was involved with training nurses in the Philippines and bringing them to the U.S., which is how I got involved in the human capital side of healthcare.

  • 7.

    Continuing in healthcare human capital, I did a lot of work in East Africa on capacity building surrounding the HIV crisis.

  • 8.

    I currently work as CEO of The College of Health Care Professions, which is the largest provider of allied health graduates in the state of Texas—I also plan to open an allied health school in Africa.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Family:

    You have to become an engineer.

  • How I responded:

    My father wanted me to become an engineer because of the stability and success the career provides. I ended up hating my engineering classes and was miserable at school, so I switched my major. I didn't tell my family that I had switched for a while, but when I did confess, they were supportive of my new route. I did end up keeping engineering as a minor, however.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • My father always urged me to be an engineer, but after a year as an engineering major, I was miserable. I decided to get a business degree instead. It's not worth it to make other people happy with your choices if you yourself are miserable.