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KPMG Banking Managing Director Anissa Craig Spotlighted by Boston Business Journal

Anissa Craig, KPMG's banking managing director, sat down with Boston Business Journal market president Carolyn Jones for an in-depth interview profile.

Lauren Xu1 min read
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KPMG Banking Managing Director Anissa Craig Spotlighted by Boston Business Journal
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Anissa Craig, a Managing Director in KPMG's Banking practice, is the subject of a new interview-style profile published by the Boston Business Journal, with the conversation led by Carolyn Jones, the outlet's market president and publisher.

The piece is part of the Boston Business Journal's ongoing series spotlighting notable business figures in the Boston market. Jones, who regularly moderates the publication's executive profiles, conducted the conversation with Craig, bringing her editorial lens to a sit-down format that the outlet uses to surface leaders shaping their industries from within the region.

Craig's role at KPMG places her inside one of the more consequential intersections in professional services right now: banking advisory at a Big Four firm navigating a financial sector under pressure from regulatory shifts, technology disruption, and evolving risk landscapes. Managing directors at KPMG typically lead client engagements, drive practice development, and help shape the firm's strategic positioning within their sector, making Craig's visibility in a regional business publication a signal of both her standing in the Boston market and KPMG's interest in elevating its banking practice leaders publicly.

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The Boston Business Journal has a long track record of using its executive interview format to profile leaders who carry influence beyond their immediate organizations. Jones's role as both market president and publisher means her choice of interview subject carries editorial weight, not just promotional value.

For KPMG's Boston-area presence, the profile represents a moment of external recognition for a practice area that rarely gets the kind of public-facing attention that, say, technology or consulting units tend to attract. Banking advisory work tends to happen quietly, making Craig's willingness to engage in a published conversation with a regional business audience a relatively notable step into the spotlight.

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