
|

|
CEO Spotlight: Matt Glickman, Merced Systems
By Angel Mehta, Managing Director, Sterling-Hoffman Executive Search
The phrase 'serial entrepreneur' comes to mind when Matt Glickman is in the
room. In the dotcom bubble, he founded BabyCenter, a website for soon-to-be
moms and dads. His current venture? An enterprise software vendor focused on
revolutionizing customer operations performance management. Angel Mehta,
Managing Director of Sterling-Hoffman, chats with Matt Glickman, CEO of
Merced Systems, about lessons from the rustbelt, finding the right business
partner, and what to do when you don't know why things aren't working.
Angel Mehta: Was entrepreneurship something you
always felt destined for, or was it something you fell
into almost by accident?
Matt Glickman: Even at a young age, I liked
business. I always thought I’d grow up and run a
manufacturing company as I just loved making things, and
manufacturing and operations is what the Midwest has a
lot of. Also, my dad was a lawyer for a lot of small
businesses so I had exposure to a lot of small
manufacturing shops, and then in my first job out of
college, I was exposed to big auto assembly plants. So
yes, I always thought that’s what I would do because I
loved leading people.
Angel Mehta: How did growing up surrounded by
manufacturing companies, as opposed to high tech or
investment bankers, have an impact on your business
philosophy, if at all?
Matt Glickman: It had an impact, for sure.
Watching the Rust Belt go through problems in the ‘70s
and ‘80s, I saw complacent managers who ruined people’s
lives because they just were running companies into the
ground and people were getting laid off as a matter of
routine – I saw that bad management ruins lives.
So I
think that it shaped me in the sense that I think it is
really important to manage well and execute well and
lead well because I had first-hand exposure as to what
happens when leaders screw up.
Angel Mehta: This is the second company you’ve
founded with Mark Selcow… Describe the partner-dynamic
you have with him, and why it seems to work so well.
Matt Glickman: At Stanford, one of the things I
wanted to do was find a partner because I knew I was the
type that would need to work with someone to do the
heavy lifting of building a company. I met Mark Selcow
there (at Stanford)… it’s not the usual business and
technology partnership that you think of when you think
of two people out here.
Though it does have the typical
dynamic between a sales guy and a product guy; Mark is
the sales guy, and I’m the product guy. Mark’s instinct
is to go out and sign up customers and mine is to make
sure the product works for them, which are, of course,
the two most important pieces of the puzzle. But really
our partnership is based on shared values and mutual
trust. While we have our differences, we see the world
in similar ways, and we can rely on the other without
hesitation.
Angel Mehta: Do you think starting a company
right out of school is a smart career choice? |
|
CEO Spotlight:
Matt Glickman, Merced Systems
Merced Systems
- Favorite band: Little Feat
- Hobbies: Spending time with family, tennis, squash, reading, being outdoors
- Biggest fear: That my daily travails make me lose sight of the important things in life
- Passionate about: My family, traveling, good food and wine
- Favorite movie: Diner
- Favorite color: Blue - this is a question of great interest to my children
- Most liked unusual food: Artichokes
- Most admired person: John W. Gardner
|
|
Matt Glickman: I’m not sure, but I can tell you that when we got out of school, we felt we were quite young and didn’t feel like we could go start a company; we wanted to get more experience first. I went to Intuit, which was a small company but known for good products, good marketing. One of the great things I learned from the company was how to conceive and build great products that meet a real market need. The founder of Intuit, Scott Cook, was one of the first to apply the consumer marketing tenets from his old employer P&G to the software industry. Those ideas have been instrumental in building and marketing great products at BabyCenter and at Merced. While everyone in Silicon Valley says that they are customer-driven, not technology-driven, I have found it’s more of a rarity to think product and customer first and technology second.
Angel Mehta: So how does one go from Intuit to a
dotcom for baby stuff?
Matt Glickman: It was fortunate that the Internet
was emerging just at the time that I was thinking about
what I wanted to do next and that’s why, in ’96, a
combination of the emergence of the internet, and my
wife and I considering having a baby gave me the idea
for BabyCenter. Prior to the Internet, you couldn’t
really create a one-stop shop for everything that an
expectant or new parent needs – general information,
health information and product sales. So, we built
something new that was good for consumers but was also a
really good business. Our information attracted users
without spending on marketing, and we were able to not
only sell advertising but sell products as well, which
was a better business model than the one that existed in
the pre-Internet world.
Angel Mehta: So was it difficult making the
switch from a venture focused on the consumer (BabyCenter)
to a venture focused primarily on the enterprise
(Merced)?
Matt Glickman: Not as much as you’d think. The
common theme in my life now is that I like to figure out
how to use technology to improve the way people do
things. Obviously there are a lot of differences in
terms of who you are selling to: consumers versus
businesses. But first, even in the case of a consumer
business, like BabyCenter, we were selling to big
companies like P&G, J&J and Blue Shield of California.
Second, the general skill in either case is figuring out
how to make technology work for every day people and
build the business and team around that. The consumer
world and the world of application software are pretty
similar to me in that sense.
Angel Mehta: Are you required to be passionate
about the product of the company in order to be
successful at it?
Matt Glickman: I think you have to be passionate
about some piece of the puzzle, whether it’s the end
customer or market, the product, or building a great
company. I get as much satisfaction out of the challenge
of building a great organization as I do about the
product or the market.
Angel Mehta: Is it your perspective that an
entrepreneur need not be a domain expert before entering
a business?
Matt Glickman: In my case, it wasn’t necessary.
You just have to be a quick study, be humble about what
you don’t know and be aggressive in learning what you
need to know. I’ve stepped into consumer software, I’ve
stepped into retailing and I’ve stepped into media. Now
I’ve stepped into Enterprise Software and there was
certainly a learning curve in each case, but that’s part
of being an entrepreneur: understanding and learning
your industry. At the same time, you need to figure out
some rules to break or else there’s no new opportunity
to create. In one sense, being naive about an industry
is an asset because you’re not afraid to try and solve
problems that ‘experts’ wouldn’t dare touch. We’ve
tackled some incredibly difficult technical problems
that no one in the industry has tried to tackle before,
and we did that because we didn’t know what we were
getting into. Of course, years later, we have really
strong experience and unique intellectual property
around some things that are quite valuable for our
customers.
Angel Mehta: Let’s talk a little bit about
Merced. Help me understand the core business problem you
are solving for customers right now and how you position
yourself against big ERP vendors in a way that allows
customers to seriously consider you as a viable option.
Matt Glickman: Merced sells Performance
Management software for call centers and other customer
operations groups such as retail, field service and back
office operations. Our product integrates data from all
the different transactional sources that exist in these
different environments. We cleanse it, store it, create
one version of the truth and then distribute it in very
personalized and relevant ways to everyone from the top
of the organization down to the front line employee and
then give them the means to take action to make
improvement.
Customers who deploy Merced see really big improvements
in productivity or efficiency in short time frames. The
reason we can do that is that end users can change their
behavior in a way that helps the company; that’s usually
about efficiency gains and cost reduction. It’s also
about increasing sell rates and sales rates. There is
considerable variation in performance across people,
teams and businesses in customer operations, and little
changes have a big effect on the bottom line
We are different from ERP systems and other choices on
the market because we are built from the ground up to do
performance management in complex operations
environments. The traditional ERP systems aren’t
designed for the kind of analytics that we do, and the
traditional BI players aren’t designed to make it easy
for end users to actually take action on the data. They
are really more about serving up the data.
Angel Mehta: Can you describe a couple of
instances, perhaps at either Merced or at BabyCenter,
where you felt over your head as an entrepreneur or as a
CEO?
Matt Glickman: Well, I think as an entrepreneur,
you feel over your head almost every day because you are
charting new grounds, whether it’s starting a company or
growing a company to a new level. I’m always trying to
figure out if I am making the right choice about who
we’re hiring, how we’re staffing the team, what products
we build next, what features we add. There’s no road
map.
Angel Mehta: One of the biggest challenges
entrepreneurs have is trying to pinpoint the reasons
things aren’t going the way they should, and whether a
key member of the team needs to be replaced. How do you
know when the problem with someone on your team is a
problem with someone on your team and not the market or
just bad luck?
Matt Glickman: You’re right, it’s a really hard
problem when you’re a small company and you have only
one person or a few people in each role and have only
one or two customers. You really can’t figure out if you
have a product problem, a person problem, or a
customer/marketing problem. As you get larger, though,
you can start to see patterns. You have multiple people
in different roles and some people are better than
others at leading engagements to implement the product
and some developers are more proficient than other
developers and some sales reps more successful than
others. But it’s tough – there’s no magic solution and
no clean way to isolate what is leading to success or
problems.
Angel Mehta: What do you spend most of your time
on as CEO?
Matt Glickman: My job is to be the glue across
all the different functions and everyone. One of the
advantages of not sitting in any one department is that
you can look holistically across the company and at
customers holistically. Often times, the problems and
opportunities don’t break cleanly into a product issue
or a sales issue or services issue. So I balance, I
spend my time on internal organizational issues, I spend
a chunk of time with customers, both prospects and
existing customers, and then I spend some on the
ecosystem - partners, analysts, investors. One of the
nice things about co-running the company with Mark is
that I can spend my time a little more internally, and
he can spend his time a little more externally, and that
lets us do more for the company. It’s really hard to do
both well, and our partnership gives us a better chance
of doing that.
Matt Glickman is CEO and co-founder of Merced Systems. He has
over 10 years of management experience in the software industry and in building
successful software companies. Prior to Merced, Matt was CEO of consumer
retailer BabyCenter, Inc. (currently a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson), the
leading eCommerce company. He led the development of Intuit's Quicken
software product line. Matt has also served as a management consultant to
Fortune 500 companies at Bain & Company. He graduated an Arjay Miller Scholar
from the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Matt also holds an M.A. from the
Stanford School of Education and is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Amherst
College. For interview feedback, contact Matt at matt@mercedsystems.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
|
|
|
|
|