Home 9 Computing 9 NVIDIA Names Suzanne Nora Johnson to Board

NVIDIA Names Suzanne Nora Johnson to Board

by | May 12, 2026

Audit committee role brings finance and governance experience when appointment takes effect July 13
Suzanne Nora Johnson, NVIDIA

NVIDIA announced that former Goldman Sachs vice chairman Suzanne Nora Johnson will join its board of directors effective July 13, 2026, bringing audit, finance and corporate governance experience to the board. Nora Johnson, 68, is also expected to join NVIDIA’s audit committee when her appointment takes effect.

Nora Johnson spent two decades at The Goldman Sachs and served as chair of the Global Markets Institute, head of global research and head of global health care.

“Suzanne is an extraordinary leader whose career spans finance, technology, healthcare and public policy,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Her experience guiding global companies, together with her leadership at the forefront of education and philanthropy, will be an invaluable asset to NVIDIA’s board. We are honored to welcome her and look forward to her insight as we build the future in the age of AI.”

Johnson currently serves on Pfizer Inc.’s board, where she chairs the audit committee and sits on the executive committee and regulatory and compliance committee. Nora Johnson recently stepped down as board chair of Intuit Inc., where she had served as a director since 2007. She holds a J.D. from Harvard Law School and a B.A. from the University of Southern California.

Source: NVIDIA

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA, founded in 1993 and headquartered in Santa Clara, CA, designs and manufactures graphics processing units, systems on chips, networking hardware, and AI intelligence software such as CUDA. Its products serve industries including gaming, data centers, autonomous vehicles, professional visualization, robotics, health care, and energy. The company introduced the GPU in 1999 and later expanded into accelerated computing and AI infrastructure. In gaming, its GPUs support high-performance rendering, while in AI and high-performance computing, its systems provide the infrastructure for training and deploying large-scale models. NVIDIA also develops tools for robotics and autonomous driving.