Nice article Intel Insider -- Paul Otellini Has Worn Many Hats At Intel, From Grove's Technical Assistant To Leading The Microprocessors Group. Could The CEO Crown Be Next? Lisa Spiegelman
Palo Alto, Calif. -- Whether it is chips or chiefs, Intel Corp.'s road map for the next generation is always pretty clear.
While the company put Craig Barrett in charge only in May, Intel is busy grooming the next heir apparent. And that person, according to several insiders, is Paul Otellini.
If true, Otellini will join the distinguished ranks of Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore, Andrew Grove and Craig Barrett as the future leader of the Santa Clara, Calif., chip maker.
As a visionary in the making, Otellini's current challenge is implementing Intel's market segmentation strategy. And that is no easy task, analysts and industry executives said.
On the low end, Otellini has to develop Intel's response to a changing PC market where demand for sub-$1,000 PCs is booming. On the high end, he is to formulate a plan for more specialized PCs.
"As computers become more pervasive, one size will not fit all. People will want to buy only the machines for the task they want," said Otellini, executive vice president and general manager of Intel's Architecture Business Group. But Otellini's ability to quickly respond to change will help the executive, co-workers said.
"To successfully run a business like this, you need to anticipate change. Paul is superb about that," said Karen Atler, Intel's director of microprocessor marketing and business planning. "He is an interesting blend of incredible intellectual power and tremendous energy."
Otellini uses that energy to develop products that meet the needs of the low-end, high-end or mobile markets. "[It takes more than pricing.] You have to tailor your whole development stream, not just silicon," he said.
"We have played in the low end for the last year by pricing Pentium cheaply, but that is not a great way to play long term," Otellini said.
Intel has been hit hard by the burgeoning sub-$1,000 PC market. No longer are VARs selling the fastest computer. Instead, VARs are selling inexpensive PCs that can run the software, analysts said. And while that is great for PC buyers, it wreaks havoc on Intel's high-margin, high-profit business model, said industry watchers.
"Intel's business model has always been making money producing the next fastest and better processor and now we're in a market where people don't care about the fastest and best. They care about getting a computer that runs the software just fine," said Dean McCarron, an analyst with Mercury Research, a research firm in Scottsdale, Ariz.
What is more, Intel's initial efforts to compete in the sub-$1,000 PC market with its Celeron chip were met with lackluster reviews because it was slower than rival chip products from Advanced Micro Devices Inc., Sunnyvale, Calif., and National Semiconductor Corp.'s Cyrix Corp., Richardson, Texas, analysts said.
Thus, Intel's future may well depend on Otellini's success at steering the chip maker through these changing times, said industry watchers.
"Otellini has to meet the challenge of the $1,000-and-under PC marketplace," said Carl Everett, a former Intel executive who is now a senior vice president at Dell Computer Corp., Round Rock, Texas. "It's a price point that has caused the PC market to grow but you can't find anyone that has made any money in it."
Others agreed.
"It is significantly more difficult to make money there . . . . The processors are selling for $50 in the low end. Intel makes between $500 to $700 on one processor in a high-end system," said McCarron. "Intel has been late, but the reason [they] are late is: Why on earth would they give up 50 percent margins?"
Otellini also has to successfully sell Intel's product branding strategy.
"If Intel is going to be successful as three brands, he has to have the vision to lay it out and the discipline to execute it," said Everett.
Meeting new challenges, however, is nothing new to Otellini.
"I have always had to fend for myself," said Otellini, 48, who worked his way through school by selling everything from men's suits to hot dogs at the ball park.
He earned a B.A. in economics in 1972 from the University of San Francisco and an M.B.A. from the University of California at Berkeley in 1974.
Born and raised in San Francisco, Otellini still lives in the city by the Bay. Since joining Intel in 1974, Otellini has driven one to one-and-a-half hours each way between San Francisco and Intel's headquarters in Santa Clara. And his career has kept pace with his mileage.
Starting as a programmer in 1974, Otellini worked his way up through the financial ranks to Group Controller for microprocessor products in 1980.
Otellini said he picked Intel because he wanted to be in the high-tech industry and, "I like products. I like things that are tangible."
He then was assigned to manage Intel's business with IBM Corp. from 1980 to 1985-a critical time in the development of personal computer business.
"It was a wonderful time through the ramp-up of the 8088, 286 and the early design stages of the 386, and if you remember, Compaq [Computer Corp.] ended up leapfrogging IBM with the 386," he said.
Otellini's next assignment landed him in Folsom, Calif., as general manager of Intel's Peripheral Components Operation. Today, he is credited with launching the company's peripheral chip business.
In 1987, Otellini was promoted to general manager of the Folsom Microcomputer Division.
"He had a vision to stick with the peripheral chip business and fund it before it was a success," said Everett. Intel's peripheral chipset business generated $1.2 billion in sales in 1997, according to Mercury Research.
"I got Intel to understand that if you could somehow get another piece of silicon or pieces of silicon around the microprocessor when the volume was ramping on a given generation, you could greatly increase your returns," said Otellini.
In 1989, he became Grove's technical assistant-a job where he did whatever Grove, then president of Intel, wanted, said Otellini. "It is really fun, and it is hard. You don't have a moment where you are allowed to be intellectually dishonest. You are completely on all the time," he said.
Everett said, "Being Andy's TA means he got strategically in step and cultivated. That is a great learning experience, and I think Paul really blossomed in that role."
Like other Intel executives being groomed for the top ranks at Intel, Otellini has been assigned to increasingly more challenging and broader jobs.
During Otellini's 24-year career at Intel, for example, he has worked in finance, sales, product development, international, sales and marketing.
"The worse thing you can do in this industry is to get stale or to get bored, and the only way to avoid that is to put yourself on the line," said Otellini.
In 1990, Otellini was promoted to general manager of the Microprocessors Group where his responsibilities included managing the introduction of the Pentium products. Then, in 1994, he was reassigned to sales and marketing.
"Craig felt that if it makes sense to rotate people early in their career to grow, it makes sense for people later in their career to grow," Otellini said.
Otellini's success has positioned him as one of the most senior managers at Intel today. He was elected a corporate officer in 1991, a senior vice president in 1993 and an executive vice president in 1996.
Much of Otellini's success is credited to his willingness to move into areas where he has little experience and his ability to quickly respond to change.
Such strengths make him well-suited to tackle today's changing markets, Intel insiders said.
Otellini, for example, has managed Intel's product development even though he is not an engineer and doesn't have an engineering degree.
"I think it helps sometimes not to have the in-depth knowledge in things so you can ask those quote 'dumb' questions that sometimes often kind of change the rules," Otellini said.
Otellini's weakness is that he can get easily frustrated. And he shows it.
"He can be uncomfortable. I have seen him when he is stern, and I think he needs to soften up with the public," said Everett.
But Otellini also can be very social and quick-witted, said Atler, adding: "He can go to a sales meeting and get down and play pool with people.
"Barrett is more a disciplined, forceful individual. Andy is a tremendous people person. He can read people better than anyone I've ever seen. But Paul, you can pick on Paul and he will laugh at it. He's just naturally a more social character than either of them," she said. |