
|

|
CEO Spotlight: Bob Calderoni, Ariba Inc.
By Angel Mehta, Managing Director, Sterling-Hoffman Executive Search
When once high-flying Ariba ran into turbulence in 2001, it handed the reigns to its resident finance-whiz, CFO Bob Calderoni. As CEO, he has presided over Ariba’s emergence as a bonafide stand-alone software company. Angel Mehta, Managing Director of Sterling-Hoffman, chats with Bob about managing a merger of equals, and revolutionizing the strategic sourcing process worldwide.
Angel Mehta: Who were your most important mentors? What
were the most valuable lessons they imparted to you?
Bob Calderoni: I’ve had the good fortune of working with
a number of really good leaders – Lou Gerstner and Jerry York at
IBM, Steve Jobs at Apple, and I have been able to glean a little
bit from each of them to create my own style. In Jerry York, I
got to watch someone come into a business he didn’t know and
quickly dissect it to effectively drive change. Jerry was a
great executive and a great change agent. I think the situations
I have found myself in, throughout my career, have also shaped
my approach. You learn a lot about a business when you go
through tough times. The downturn at IBM and the dark days at
Apple were great experiences for me.
Angel Mehta: Was there a particular reason that Ariba
needed a CEO with a finance background? What do you think drove
their decision to bring you on, given that most software CEOs
have a technical or sales background?
Bob Calderoni: Ariba was in a bit of a turmoil following
the bubble burst. And the thinking initially was that the
company needed someone at the helm who could bring a sense of
fiscal responsibility and measure of strong leadership. Given my
experience as a financial executive at large companies and my
ability to navigate through difficult times, it was expected
that I would come in and clean up the balance sheet and right
size the organization. And we did that within 30 days. What was
not expected was that the bean counter would recreate the
company strategy, transform the business model, build domain
expertise and step on the pedal of innovation. When I took over,
we were a one-product company. In two years, we have become an
eleven-product company with a completely re-architected platform
that was positioned for growth.
Angel Mehta: What advantages have you found in having a
finance background to head a software company? Have you ever
felt at a disadvantage? Have you ever felt as if there are areas
of the business that you wish you knew more about?
Bob Calderoni: I don’t know of anyone coming up through
the ranks who has greater visibility into an organization from
top to bottom across all divisions and the responsibilities that
go with that, than the CFO. As a CFO, you’re constantly learning
a lot about everything in the business. So it’s a great platform
to prepare for being a CEO. When I trained as a CFO under Jerry
York, it wasn’t good enough to just be responsible for the
finance organization. That was expected. What was also expected
was to know about manufacturing even though you weren’t a
manufacturing guy, and to know about the product portfolio even
though you weren’t an engineering guy, and to know the operating
structure of the sales organization even though you weren’t a
sales guy.
Angel Mehta: Tell me about one key lesson / principle /
concept you took away from your tenures at IBM and Apple?
|
|
CEO Spotlight:
Bob Calderoni, Ariba Inc.
Ariba Inc.
- Favorite band: Hootie and the Blowfish, John Mellencamp
- Hobbies: Golf and Offshore Fishing
- Biggest fear: Failing
- Passionate about: Winning, very competitive
- Favorite movie: Not a big movie fan but I like comedies. Borat was
hilarious.
- Favorite color: Blue
- Least liked food: Vegetables, unless it's in Chinese food
- Most admired person: Ronald Reagan, fearless leader with strong convictions and principles
- Best Friend: my wife Pattie who I have been with for the last 17 years
|
|
Bob Calderoni: Organizations and people are very, very
resilient and can handle a lot more change than they think they
can. But what they need is, somebody to lead them through the
change. I’ve often heard that “the organization can’t do this,”
or “if we try to do that, we’re going to kill the organization.”
The best companies have strong leaders who push their teams to
innovate and change and give them the support they need to do
it. That’s what makes them so great.
Angel Mehta: What aspects of the culture at IBM do you
aspire to bring to Ariba? What aspects of the culture at Apple
do you aspire to bring to Ariba? What aspects of each would you
actively work to keep OUT?
Bob Calderoni: From a cultural point of view, I’ve seen
polar extremes. The culture at IBM was very disciplined,
buttoned-down and process oriented. And the culture at Apple was
pretty freewheeling. Ariba is somewhere in the middle of these
two extremes – probably closer to Apple than IBM. We have a lot
of very smart people who work hard and are empowered to make a
difference without a lot of structure and bureaucracy. You’re
given enough rope to get your job done without a lot of
limitations. And that’s the type of culture I want to try to
further within the organization – results-oriented, low on
rules, high on individual initiative.
Angel Mehta: Why does Ariba have a good chance of
continuing as a stand-alone software company? Is there enough
potential left in its market for growth?
Bob Calderoni: With our transition to an on-demand
delivery model, we’ve opened access to thousands and thousands
of customers we could never reach before. So the market for
spend management solutions is much bigger than it ever was. It’s largely unpenetrated and very early in the innovation cycle. And
these are the characteristics of a market where a nimble, highly
focused company like Ariba can thrive. The types of markets in
which companies get absorbed by larger entities are typically
fully penetrated and at the end of their innovation cycle, and
the only thing left to do is consolidate. In addition, we’ve got
a lot of smart people and expertise in addition to technology,
and we think that is a significant barrier to entry. Solving the
spend management challenge takes deep commodity expertise and
years of procurement experience and you just can’t engineer your
way to that.
Angel Mehta: A few years after the acquisition of
FreeMarkets, have the predictions of reverse-auctioning changing
the sourcing process come true? What impact has the acquisition
had on Ariba’s growth?
Bob Calderoni: A key part of our strategy is being a
truly integrated solution provider that combines technology with
deep domain expertise and services. One of the things that
attracted us most to FreeMarkets was their people and the deep
domain expertise they had around hundreds of categories in
sourcing, and the global organization they had built around it.
That organization is a vital part of Ariba today. It complements
the technology that we offer our customers and is one of the
main reasons that companies choose to work with us. The
combination or coming together of advanced technology with this
deep domain expertise has dramatically changed the way companies
source spend. Today, companies are sourcing tens of billions of
dollars of spend they never thought could be sourced or
auctioned.
Angel Mehta: Based on your experience managing through
some very turbulent times, do you think it’s always fair to
measure the capability of an executive leader by the results
generated? What do you consider when deciding whether someone on
your team needs to be replaced? How do you know?
Bob Calderoni: Results always matter. But you have to
measure against the right set of results. And as strategy shifts
and business needs change, you’re measuring different things at
different times. We knew we needed to go from one product to a
broad array of products. Nothing else would have mattered if we
couldn’t get the products out. So the results we looked for
during that period were all tied to delivery. At another point
in our transition, we were focused on building a service
organization. The results we looked for then were related to
building assets and capabilities that would enable us to get
results in the marketplace. Our intent is always to do what is
best for the organization and our shareholders. But you can’t
measure success and failure on stock price alone.
Angel Mehta: What’s been the most difficult period of
your tenure as CEO of Ariba?
Bob Calderoni: The merger with FreeMarkets. Usually, when
you have a merger, there’s a big company and a small company,
and the big company just takes over. But when you’re bringing
together two companies of equal size and strength, as we did
with Ariba and FreeMarkets, no one really takes over. What we
set out to do was merge a company that is predominantly software
with a company that was predominantly services. The cultures and
attitudes were totally different. And we weren’t trying to
convert one to the other, we were trying to create something new
which was a blended technology and services company. That proved
to be a lot more difficult than anyone anticipated and it was
two years before we could say it was done.
Angel Mehta: What are your top 3 business priorities for
2007?
Bob Calderoni: Our top priority is to complete our
transition to an on-demand business model and ignite the growth
gene that has been dormant, as we’ve moved though this
transition phase.
Bob Calderoni is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Ariba Inc., a leading spend management solutions provider. Prior to joining Ariba, he served as Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer for Avery Dennison, and before that as Senior Vice President of Finance and Corporate Controller for Apple Computer, Inc., and as Chief Financial Officer and Vice President of Finance for IBM's $8 billion Storage Systems Division. In 2006, Bob was named among the 100 Most Influential People in Finance by Treasury & Risk Management Magazine. For interview feedback, contact Bob at bcalderoni@ariba.com
Angel Mehta is Managing Director of Sterling-Hoffman, a retained
executive search firm focused on VP Sales, VP Marketing and CEO
searches for enterprise software companies and lead investor in
http://www.softwaresalesjobs.com, the #1 site for software sales
jobs. Angel can be reached for feedback at
amehta@sterlinghoffman.net
|
|
|
|
|