SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> Careers and the Job Market

New VMWare CEO making waves

New VMWare CEO making waves

By:  James Niccolai  On: 22 Oct 2008 For: IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau)(NA) Creator

Three months into the job and Paul Maritz has already announced sweeping changes including a hiring freeze and plans for separate product divisions.

Three months after being made VMware's CEO, Paul Maritz has announced changes at the company that are designed to help it ride out the economic storm while at the same time changing from a fast-growing startup into a mature software company.

The changes include implementing a hiring freeze -- or "hiring pause," as Maritz put it -- that started during the third quarter and will probably last into 2009. He will also divide VMware into separate business units to handle different areas of product development and appoint new senior executives to manage those divisions.

The changes were announced after VMware reported solid third-quarter financial results Tuesday, including profits that were ahead of expectations. But they also come as the IT industry braces for an expected slowdown in customer spending, and as VMware in particular exits a heady period of rapid growth.

Revenue at the virtualization software company grew 37 percent in the third quarter, to US$472 million. That compared with growth of 54 percent in the second quarter, 69 percent in the first, and 80 percent in the fourth quarter of last year.

"VMware is coming off a period of very rapid growth, so it's a healthy thing in any case to take stock and make sure we have people focused on the right areas," Maritz said during a conference call Tuesday, in reference to the hiring freeze. "But it's also too soon to say what will happen in 2009" in terms of customer spending, he said.

"We'll suspend new hiring except for important and strategic hires," Maritz said. "We'll continue this into the fourth quarter, and frankly into 2009 as well."

The company joins SAP and Microsoft, among others, in its decision to limit hiring amid the economic slowdown.

Maritz said dividing the company into separate product divisions will help it to execute on its plans while it continues to expand. He didn't say how those divisions would break down. They each will have a separate research and development group but will share a common sales and marketing force, he said.

"We're still working our way through the details; our intent is to have them ready and implemented as we go into 2009," Maritz said. The company will hire or promote a senior executive to run each division, he said.

The move comes as VMware expands its technology roadmap into new areas. At VMworld in September, the company said it would build a "virtual datacenter operating system," including new products for virtualizing not only servers, but also network and storage gear. It is also developing products to let companies link their data centers to those of cloud computing service providers.

The executive changes may also help address turmoil that hit VMware's upper ranks. Diane Greene, its former CEO and co-founder, was ousted earlier this year. She was followed soon after by Chief Scientist Mendel Rosenblum, who is Greene's husband, and Richard Sarwal, who led research and development. Maritz addressed those departures on the call.


Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags: virtualizing












Print |  Views: 642   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




James Niccolai James Niccolai is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

10 things seen and heard at VMWorld
10 things seen and heard at VMWorldWhile 14,000 users attended a VMware partner conference in Las Vegas, someone distributed fake casino chips promoting Microsoft Hyper-V. Find out about VMware’s plans for cloud computing and the iPhone
Conference catchup: VMWorld 2008
Conference catchup: VMWorld 2008VMware Inc. announced its vCloud and vClient initiatives, plus its the Virtual Datacenter Operating System. A quick roundup of ComputerWorld Canada’s complete coverage
Greene out, Maritz in at VMware
Greene out, Maritz in at VMwareThe founder and CEO of the wildly successful virtualization firm is gone, replaced by a Microsoft vet and cloud computing pioneer, and causing a huge drop in share prices
Ross Pellizzari leaves Cisco Canada
ross pellizzari’s departure as cisco canada’s channel chief is really sad news for me personally, and i believe for the it industry in canada.pellizzari has the passion you need to be successful in this job. a channel chief has to have passion so they can help ch
New VMware CEO deals with mistake made on his watch
a mere month ago, vmware had ousted their ceo and one of the founders -- dianne green -- for former microsoft director paul maritz. and thus the stage had been set for the new leader to take vmware into battle against its biggest threat to date -- the looming software juggernaut that is microsoft. maritz was still firmly in the honeymoon phase of the new job when on the morning of augus
blog comments powered by Disqus