On MovieTome: The 10 worst movies of 2009 so far!
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

January 5th, 2006

The Babe Ruth of Silicon Valley, and others in my top silicon valley people of 2005

Posted by Tom Foremski @ 5:42 am

Categories: Business strategy, Silicon Valley

Tags:

There were many people this year that stood out. Here is a continuation of my prior people list. Again, in no order of importance, just my recollection at this moment :-)

-Jim Buckmaster, CEO of Craigslist. He’s made "think local, act global" into a reality. There is now a Craigslist on nearly every community corner around the world (catty corner to every Starbucks!)

Craigslist provides a heck of a lot of value while monetizing just a tiny fraction of its traffic. And that creates a tremendous amount of customer loyalty. Craigslist is very much a new rules enterprise.

-Greg Gianforte, CEO of RightNow Technologies. Greg spends a lot of time in Silicon Valley even though his thriving CRM software-as-a-service company is headquartered in Bozeman, Montana.

Greg loves to build companies and offer advice. In fact, his column on why startups should not take VC money, is simply superb. People should read it every day.

BTW, Geoffrey Moore, of Chasm fame, promised to refute every single point in Greg’s VC column. It hasn’t arrived yet, so maybe the blogosphere will deliver this reminder to Mr Moore :-)

-Network Appliance CEO Dan Warmenhoven and co-founder Dave Hitz. They make a good double act and excellent company. Their Silicon Valley anecdotes are great, and so is their positioning of the company alongside a very solid view into the IT industry.

This is a company that knows where it is going. If they are right about the location of the meta control/choke point (the data) then NetApp might very well be the next Cisco.

-Irving Wladawsky-Berger, chief strategist at IBM and one of its most influential thinkers and leaders. We caught up recently, and swapped notes on a lot of things, including blogging.

Irving continues to be huge champion of open source, open standards, and industry standard hardware platforms. IBM’s support for Linux and its legal defense of the open source movement is a direct result of Irving’s work.

-Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple Computer. Okay, this is the ONE person on these lists I didn’t get to meet in 2005 and it is probably ten years since the last time we met, but you’ve got to hand it to Steve Jobs; he has hit more out of the ball park in the past few years than anyone else in the industry.

Steve Jobs is the Babe Ruth of Silicon Valley. Let’s see if Bill Gates can reinvent Microsoft, the way Steve Jobs has done at Apple–many times over. Then there is Pixar–a movie studio without a single dud movie.

I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again: Bill Gates, you are no Steve Jobs…but then again, maybe you are?  :-)

-Larry Ellison-CEO of Oracle. Okay, this is just one of TWO people on these lists that I didn’t meet with in 2005, and it’s probably a couple of years since we last met.

Larry Ellison is notable because I’m still amazed at how he managed to roll up a massive chunk of the enterprise software sector. And he did it so quickly. A strong legal team certainly helps.

But what if the enterprise software market goes away? The software-as-a-service contingent is one threat, another is the roll-your-own brigade such as Jotspot.

The other threat is that the enterprises, the customer base itself, goes away, victims of what I call New Rules Enterprises.

Talkback

Add your opinion

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

Premier Vendor Content Whitepapers, webcasts & resources from our Power Center Sponsors
The best support in the Linux business
If Linux is going to power your mission-critical applications, you'd better have the best support known to business. Novell was rated the top provider of Linux technical support.
Learn more >>
The more you simplify, the more you save
When you transition from your existing Red Hat environment to SUSE Linux Enterprise from Novell, you can recognize dramatic cost savings, perhaps as much 50%
Learn more >>
Keep Up With The Latest In Document Management with The DocuMentor.
Doc delivers the scoop on today's enterprise content management, printer maintenance, and all other issues related to document management. It's the DocuMentor Blog.
Learn more >>
Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online - Free Six-Month Trial for Eligible Organizations
Microsoft Dynamics CRM Online provides fast online access, simple contact management and better sales performance for a low monthly cost - the best value on the market today.
Learn more about the free, six-month trial offer>>
Learn more about tools to grow your business
The Business Essentials Guide provides you useful tools and templates to help grow your business and save you time with automated shipping solutions.
Save time with the UPS Business Essentials Guide
Reduce risk. Reduce complexity. Increase reliability.
A simplified IT environment isn't just less complex. It's also more reliable. Standardize on a single Linux platform with SUSE Linux Enterprise from Novell, and get the world's most interoperable Linux
Learn more >>

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Enterprise Applications

  • Check out some of the easiest and most powerful ways to boost productivity while saving money on your application infrastructure. See ZDNet's comprehensive Enterprise Application resource center, now!
  • New Online Dashboard
  • Read about top issues IT decision-makers face every day, plus get cost effective solutions to real life IT problems. Oracle Topline