July 22, 1999 4:55pm Why Compaq didn't turn to Mr. Outside? By Charles Cooper ZDNet News Meet the new boss.
He's nothing like the old boss.
Michael Capellas, Compaq's new president and chief executive, comes to the job armed with a resume that's separated by a world of difference from Eckhard Pfeiffer, his ousted predecessor.
Unlike Pfeiffer, who was given to sketching out lofty scenarios for Compaq and the computer industry, everything in Capellas' background points in another direction. Appointed chief information officer when he came to Compaq in August 1998, Capellas put in stints at both Oracle and SAP after a long career at Schlumberger Ltd., the oil services company where he served as its first ever director of information systems. Knows tech "Michael offers a good balance between being a thinker and a doer," said Ray Lane, the No. 2 executive at Oracle Corp. and Capellas' former boss. "He always had bright ideas that he managed through to execution." Indeed, in introducing Capellas to the press today, company chairman Ben Rosen praised his new hire's superior grasp of technology and said Compaq was so impressed that it only offered the job to Capellas.
Ever since Pfeiffer was shown the door three months ago, many analysts had assumed the company would turn to an outsider in much the same way IBM looked to Lou Gerstner who was at RJR Nabisco. There were a number of critics who said the company needed to bring in a marketing maven who could impose a grand vision.
But Rosen was having none of that during a question-and-answer session following his prepared remarks. "We focused our search more on people who understood the industry," Rosen said.
Precedent for choice There is a precedent for bringing in an insider. For example, Jim Barksdale, the former chief executive of Netscape, earned his stripes as CIO of Federal Express from 1979 to 1983, where he built and implemented an extensive customer service and package-tracking system.
In 1983 he was appointed chief operating officer of FedEx, which grew from $1 billion in sales that year to $7.7 billion by 1992 when he left FedEx to become the president and COO of McCaw Cellular Communications. A couple of years later, he was picked by Jim Clark to take the helm at upstart Netscape, which he guided until the completion of its sale to AOL earlier this year. Plumbing work "This is a very clever choice," Oracle's Lane recalled. "Michael always understood the buyer, which is vital now that Compaq's future is in the enterprise." f Capellas has any broad plan to reshape Compaq -- such as exiting the low-margin business of making consumer PCs -- he wasn't sharing them today. Compaq faces increasing competition in the retail market where smaller, more nimble rivals such as eMachines have nibbled away at the company's market share. Upon hearing the news of Capellas' appointment, eMachines CEO Steven Dukker chuckled when he heard Compaq had opted for a nuts-and-bolts information services specialist.
Said Dukker: "Let's hope they all concentrate on plumbing. And we can pick up the pieces" of the market that Compaq might opt to ignore as its focuses on other areas. |