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In the Company of Giants

Page 1

by Rama Dev Jager




  IN THE

  COMPANY

  OF GIANTS

  CANDID CONVERSATIONS

  WITH THE VISIONARIES

  OF THE DIGITAL WORLD

  RAMA D. JAGER

  RAFAEL ORTIZ

  McGraw-Hill

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  Copyright © 1997 by Rama D. Jagar and Rafael Ortiz. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

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  TERMS OF USE

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  DOI: 10.1036/0071383425

  To my mother—who, in spite of all of these giants, remains the primary source of my inspiration.

  —RDJ

  To my parents, who taught me to read, and to Lisa, for teaching me what it means to write.

  —RGO

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  CONTENTS

  Acknowledgments

  xi

  Preface

  xiii

  INTRODUCTION

  1

  1

  STEVE JOBS

  Apple Computer, NeXT Software, and Pixar

  ONLY THE BEST—PEOPLE, PRODUCT, PURPOSE

  9

  2

  T. J. RODGERS

  Cypress Semiconductor

  THE IMPORTANCE OF VISION, ACCORDING TO THE

  GENERAL

  27

  3

  GORDON EUBANKS

  Symantec

  BRANDS AND BANDS

  45

  4

  STEVE CASE

  America Online

  IT’S THE CUSTOMER, STUPID.

  61

  vii

  Copyright 1997 Rama D. Jagar and Rafael Ortiz. Click Here for Terms of Use.

  viii

  CONTENTS

  5

  SCOTT COOK

  Intuit

  IT’S THE CUSTOMER, STUPID. PART II

  73

  6

  SANDY KURTZIG

  ASK

  GO FOR IT!

  87

  7

  JOHN WARNOCK/CHARLES GESCHKE

  Adobe Systems

  ON PARTNERSHIP

  99

  8

  MICHAEL DELL

  Dell Computer

  GROWING TEXAS REIGN

  115

  9

  CHARLES WANG

  Computer Associates

  MANAGIN’, NEW YAWK STYLE

  127

  10

  BILL GATES

  Microsoft

  RUNNING THE PANZER DIVISION

  143

  CONTENTS

  ix

  11

  ANDY GROVE

  Intel

  AN IMMIGRANT IN THE TRENCHES

  161

  12

  TRIP HAWKINS

  Electronic Arts/3DO

  CREATIVITY, THE ULTIMATE GAME

  175

  13

  ED MCCRACKEN

  Silicon Graphics

  MEDITATIVE MANAGEMENT

  191

  14

  KEN OLSEN

  Digital Equipment Corporation

  REFLECTIONS ON THE REVOLUTION

  209

  15

  BILL HEWLETT

  Hewlett-Packard

  PEOPLE ARE EVERYTHING

  225

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  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  For innumerable reasons, our sincere appreciation goes to Rama’s father, Dr. Rama M. Jager, and to Irv Grousbeck, Andy Grove, and Ed Lazear. Without them, we never would have been able to create Giants.

  We are grateful to our editor at McGraw-Hill, Susan Barry, who believed in two fresh first-time authors, and to our agent, Sheryl Fullerton, who patiently steered our exuberant, chaotic efforts in the general direction of a book.

  Rafael’s wife, Lisa, graciously offered advice, support, and much-needed reprimands—“Strunk and White wouldn’t like that”—all while keeping her own writing career from being derailed by ours, no small feat.

  Rama (Dev) thanks his mother, Dr. Nirmala M. Ray, for her support throughout the entire process—but mostly for her belief in me. Rama also thanks two role models: Dr. Robert Burnett and Dr. Lee Shahinian, Jr., and the rest of the EMCard team, for their patience in dealing with Giants while running a startup.

  For advice, guidance, and candid feedback we’d like to thank Connie Bagley, David Bradford, Robert Burgelman, Steve Butler, Dennis Coleman, Ann Crichton, Rohit Deshpande, Jim and Marilyn Lattin, George Parker, Steve Piersante, Garth Saloner, and Diane Savage.

  In addition, we would like to thank three executives who
generously gave us time and guidance during the early phases of the project, but regrettably could not be included in Giants: Heidi Roizen (former CEO of T/Maker, current head of Apple Developer Relations), Walter Loewenstern and Ken Oshman (co-founders of ROLM).

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  Copyright 1997 Rama D. Jagar and Rafael Ortiz. Click Here for Terms of Use.

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  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Finally, we thank the CEOs who agreed to be a part of Giants. Their time is perhaps their most precious resource, and we are grateful for their generosity with it both during our interviews and after, when we needed answers to “just one more question.” By sharing their experiences, they have taught us tremendously.

  PREFACE

  The professor asked, with a wide grin, “So you want to write a book on high-tech CEOs? Well, gentlemen, it’s a long shot. A huge long shot. And, besides…no CEO knows why he is successful. It’s all just luck.”

  On a balmy day in mid-spring, we were two Stanford MBA students trying hard to conceal our disappointment. Coming from a well-known strategic management professor, a comment such as this seemed somewhat ridiculous—for if successful management were all luck, then why were we taking his class? Why, for that matter, were we in business school?

  Surely, successful management was not entirely due to luck—

  there had to be some successful strategy and ideas at play too.

  Louis Pasteur once said that chance favors the prepared mind. If “chance” is a major factor in a company’s success, as our professor believed, then we really wanted to know what successful entrepreneurs do to “prepare” their minds.

  What are the crucial skills needed to run a successful company? To hire great people? To ship a great product? What skills should a potential manager try to develop? Why was one manager successful where another wasn’t? Answers to these questions, in the words of the very people who have started succcessful technology companies, comprise this book.

  WHO WE CHOSE TO SPEAK WITH AND

  WHY WE CHOSE THEM

  Bill Gates. Andy Grove. Bill Hewlett. Steve Jobs. Why them?

  Why not others?

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  xiv

  PREFACE

  Hundreds of entrepreneurs have had great ideas and have started great companies. What differentiates the vast majority of entrepreneurs profiled in this book is that they not only have started their respective companies, but also have had an active role in the company’s growth. These entrepreneurs weren’t booted out of the company after starting it—they weren’t people who had one great original idea, implemented it, and left because they weren’t good managers. Instead, they had a great idea, managed the team that implemented the idea, and then had another great idea and managed the team that implemented that idea. They transformed the company from a “one-great-product” company to a “two-or-more-great-products” company; they made the company grow—they not only planted the seed, they watered the plant.

  We chose to focus on the computer industry for two reasons. First and foremost, computers are dynamically changing the way people exist. They are causing generational change.

  Compared to our parents—who use computers for word processing or technical applications at best—many of us use the power of computers for surfing the internet, communicating with friends and colleagues, and balancing a checkbook.

  Second, going to Stanford’s business school put us in the heart of Silicon Valley. Steve Jobs candidly told us one night,

  “Well, if you’re at heaven’s gate, you might as well walk inside and take a peek.”

  WHAT OUR BOOK ATTEMPTS TO DO

  Reading this book is not an instant path to guaranteed wealth.

  Notice that this book is not entitled How to Start a Billion-Dollar Computer Company, or How to Get Rich Quick Off Chips. Such titles do not genuinely help us convey the messages of this book.

  What we do want to convey are stories of some of the

  PREFACE

  xv

  greatest entrepreneurs in history. Their companies directly influence the way we live, what we do, and even what we can’t do. Instead of focusing on these companies, In the Company of Giants focuses on leaders—we attempted to discern who the person was behind the company, what his or her style of management was, and whether this conflicted with, or con-formed to, conventional startup wisdom. Looking at the people behind these companies is one small way of interpreting the revolutionary technological change that the world is experiencing today.

  Rama D. Jager

  Rafael Ortiz

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  IN THE

  COMPANY

  OF GIANTS

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  I N T R O D U C T I O N

  FROM SAND TO

  GOLD

  A BRIEF AND RELEVANT

  HISTORY OF THE

  HIGH-TECH INDUSTRY

  On January 22, 1984, 100 million people were watching the Los Angeles Raiders as they crushed the Washington Redskins 38-9 in Super Bowl XXVIII. The halftime show, a made-for-TV extravaganza, proved but a sidelight to the production value of the television advertisements that elbowed their way into viewers’ living rooms.

  One such commercial, never aired again, stood above the rest and branded the nation’s collective consciousness.

  In it, gray brainwashed automatons marched toward a gi-gantic screen of sinister Big Brother (a thinly veiled IBM) rhapsodizing about “everybody using one standard.” Out of the shadows, a lone woman, clearly not indoctrinated like those around her, charges and hurls a sledgehammer at his project-ed image. The result: a shattered false oracle and newfound freedom for the oppressed masses. The somewhat surreal Orwellian ad ends with a voice proclaiming, “On January 24th, Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh. And you’ll see why 1984 won’t be like ‘1984.’”

  Literally a smashing success, this ad promoted the alternative to an IBM-centric vision of computing and launched 1

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  2

  INTRODUCTION

  Apple Computer’s next generation of personal computing, the Apple Macintosh.

  Part of that commercial’s and eventually, the Macintosh’s, success was because of Apple’s chairman, Steve Jobs. That year, Jobs formally unveiled the Macintosh at the company’s annual shareholder meeting in Cupertino, California. With showman’s style, he unveiled the Macintosh computer—capable of accepting user commands using a graphical, desktop interface and manipulated by the user with menu-based commands. No more obscure keyboard commands. No more rat’s nest of wires and cables. It was a hit.

  As one attendee of that emotive shareholder’s meeting told us, “You can’t begin to understand the emotional intensity in the auditorium that day. Remember that the place was crowded with hundreds of disgruntled Apple employees still reeling from the failure of the Lisa [Apple’s first attempt at graphics-based computing] and dozens of cynical analysts from New York who’d seen and heard it all. I can tell you this: at the end of the meeting, everybody was on their feet wildly cheering. There wasn’t a dry eye in the house.”

  Jobs and others like him in this book have created companies that have skyrocketed to glory. What are their secrets? Is it just luck? Though fortune undeniably plays a role in all ventures, the ability to start and grow one or more companies in the tumultuous, rollicking computer industry takes some talent. Indeed, considering that as many as 90 percent of new firms fail within five years, it’s more appropriate to recognize that the Giants profiled in this book were both beneficiaries and creators of luck. Collectively, their companies command almost $100 billion in yearly revenues.

  As the industrial age had its magnates, the information age boasts its own pantheon of self-made barons. This chapter provides a brief history of the contemporary American computer industry a
nd the businesspeople who shaped it. By orienting you, the reader, with the story behind the computers we work and play with, we hope to contextualize this industry’s amazing growth and the people who led it.

  By the mid-1970s, California’s Santa Clara orchards gave

  INTRODUCTION

  3

  way to an onslaught of commercial construction. New companies and newly minted millionaires crowded Silicon Valley and the Route 128 area outside of Boston. It was the dawn of a new era in American capitalism, a new gold rush.

  But this was a gold rush of a different sort: Instead of rac-ing to extract precious metals from the ground, young opportunists converted sand’s base substance, silicon, into microchip components, pound-for-pound worth more than gold.

  Others with Midas-like insight crafted lengthy, cryptic messages using these very microchips, to automate heretofore time-consuming, manual administrative work.

  It is difficult to meaningfully convey the extent to which computers have evolved and shaped our daily march through life. Intel co-founder Gordon Moore put it in perspective by describing the phenomenon commonly known as “Moore’s Law.” This principle states that the number of transistors–and therefore the computing power–per microprocessor will double every 18 months.

  To illustrate this point, consider that the raw computational power of IBM’s powerful, million-dollar mainframes in the

  ’70s today fits into the diminutive package of a handheld cal-culator. It is this incredible development that has fueled the unprecedented change in business processes the world-over.

  Moore’s Law is in full effect.

  Ironically, many of the stories of successful entrepreneurs were not born from master plans for world domination but of sheer frustration with the ineptitude, politics and mediocrity of the companies they abandoned.

  Case in point: Thomas Watson, Sr., IBM’s spiritual father, was fired earlier in his career by his previous firm’s jealous and arbitrary executive. Undaunted, he founded a promising card tabulating company and in his disciplined, autocratic manner, led the company to incredible heights. His company’s early domination of the computer industry created tremendous wealth for IBM shareholders. At a 1954 shareholder meeting, Watson remarked:

  A purchase of 100 shares in 1914 would have cost

  4

 

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