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Changing of the Guard
Orange County Business Journal, Jun 9-Jun 15, 2008 by Tolkoff, Sarah
Technology Sector Sees New Faces at the Helm; More Professionalism
A gradual, inevitable changing of the guard is under way at some of Orange County's biggest technology companies.
Executive shake-ups are nothing new-but the county's tech landscape has seen a slew of upheavals lately at some of the biggest names in the industry.
Those who founded or built up these companies are making way for new blood-often seasoned professionals from bigger companies.
They include Silicon Valley veterans or recruits from some big names in Corporate America.
The old guard is a diverse group that counts Conexant Systems Inc.'s Dwight Decker, Costa Mesa-based Emulex Corp.'s Paul Folino, Aliso Viejo-based QLogic Corp.'s H.K. Desai, Irvine-based Epicor Software Corp.'s George Klaus and Irvine-based Broadcom Corp.'s Henry Samueli.
During the past few years, every one of them has partially stepped aside-or tried to-ushering in a new class of leaders known for their global experience and polished managerial skills.
They include Emulex's Jim McCluney, Broadcom's Scott McGregor, Epicor's Thomas Kelly and Conexant's Scott Mercer.
Natural Shift
It's part of a natural shift as the companies grow from startups to more mature, stable players, industry watchers say.
"A lot of the new folks have experience running companies all over the globe," said Gary Augusta, chief executive at Aliso Viejo-based Octane, a trade group that promotes entrepreneurs. "They have different perspectives and backgrounds at larger companies that are not startups. There are very different skill sets to run more mature types of companies."
Such has been the case for Broadcom.
Chief Executive McGregor represents the chipmaker's new era.
The former Royal Philips Electronics NV executive came to Broadcom in 2005, after the company saw accounting issues. He's brought big-company professionalism to Broadcom, which has four times the yearly revenue of what it had during the era of cofounders Samueli and Henry Nicholas, who left as chief executive in 2003.
McGregor has little of the flash or large personas of the company's founders. But Wall Street doesn't seem to mind.
"Broadcom with Samueli and Nicholas was a different company than it is today," Cody Acree, managing director with Stifel Nicolaus & Co., said in an earlier interview. "It carried a different momentum and feel."
Clashes
Some transitions aren't always as smooth.
QLogic's Desai, who's headed the company for nearly 15 years, is on the hunt for a successor after his first pick didn't work out.
A little more than a year ago, he hired Jeff Benck, an IBM Corp. veteran as a future replacement.
Things were rosy for about nine months, until Benck stepped down abruptly in March over a big sticking point-when he'd become chief executive.
There may have been some disagreement about the tuneline of the succession plan that was put in place by Desai at the board's request.
Benck was hand-picked last year by Desai after a search that lasted more than a year.
He took on the everyday tasks of running the business and managed manufacturing, product development, sales and marketing. Desai was set to remain chief executive for a time and then stay on as chairman focusing on overall strategy and managing customer relationships.
For now, Desai is back in the driver's seat.
The topic of succession is set to resurface on the board's agenda in the coming months, he said.
"I think we are just settling down with what we are doing right now," he said. "I'm fully engaged currently in the business and on the board. We will figure it out in the next few months."
One thing he'd change about the botched changeover with Benck: He said he'd push for "a quicker transition than what we had planned before."
Benck ended up taking a post last month at QLogic's rival Emulex.
Newport Beach chipmaker Conexant saw its own executive shake-up this year.
Chairman Decker is on his second stab at retirement after he tried to step back some years ago.
He used to run the company when it was a chip arm of Rockwell International Corp. and led its spinoff in 1999.
After stepping down once, he was brought back in 2005 to fix a botched combination with New Jersey's Globespan Virata Inc.
Last year, Conexant hired Dan Artusi, a veteran of Motorola Inc.'s chip arm, who stayed for about nine months as chief executive.
He's said to have been ousted by the board in April after clashes with directors over the pace and scope of a big restructuring effort.
Now the job is in the hands of Mercer, who's been on Conexant's board for five years. His background is more in finance. He's had stints at some big names, including Western Digital Corp., Dell, TeraLogic Inc. and LSI Logic Corp.
Differences
It's obvious tech's new guard is distinct from the old group.
"We are different," Desai said. "If you look at me, or Dwight (Decker) or Broadcorn's founders, we probably have a more technical background."
Other members of the old guard had the drive to run a fledgling tech company in an unproven market.