Thomas G. Baybrook

President, Defense Solutions Group (Acting)

Thomas G. Baybrook is the acting president of SAIC's Defense Solutions Group (DSG), headquartered in McLean, Virginia. Directing the actions of more than 14,000 employees, he leads a Group that achieved more than $4.6 billion in annual revenues in SAIC’s most recent fiscal year. DSG’s work focuses mainly on logistics, readiness and sustainment; command, control, communications, computers, combat systems, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance; and systems engineering and integration in support of various government agencies.

Baybrook has more than 45 years experience in government and industry in mapping and charting, research and development, hardware and software systems, and marketing. Upon joining SAIC in 1999, Baybrook led U.S. Navy and Marine Corps marketing efforts for the then Systems Engineering Group. In 2005, he served as the deputy business unit manager prior to becoming general manager of the Defense and Maritime Solutions (DMS) Business Unit.

Baybrook also spent 21 years serving in a variety of assignments with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, including company command in Vietnam, where he earned the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. Additional assignments included numerous Army and Joint Staff positions, culminating as executive director of the Defense Mapping Agency (DMA), which is now part of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA). At DMA he participated in the development of its first digital mapping systems.

Upon retiring from the Army in 1987, he joined Intergraph Corporation, establishing its Washington Systems Operations, growing its hardware and software support business within the U.S. Department of Defense and intelligence community and leading its federal sales and marketing organizations as well as managing a $700 million portfolio of Navy contracts.

Baybrook earned his master’s degree in geodetic science from Ohio State University in 1972 and his bachelor’s degree in geologic sciences (geophysics) from Penn State in 1966.