Larry Ellison hinted at this in his keynote at Oracle OpenWorld last month. He joked he did not have many friends and that he would hate to lose Mark Hurd. In a corny way that was quite a tribute to the man, who at 62 passed away way too young.
Over the years I had come to respect the man - we had conversations around complex supply chains and global policy matters. Most people did not realize how analytical he was and made Oracle marketing a digital marvel and made their sales organization much younger. He had an interesting presentation style and preferred to come off the stage and podium - that puzzled some folks but I thought it was humble of him to come down to the level of his audience.
His presentations always invoked data on market trends. Which is where I did not always see eye to eye with him. Given the market opportunities he presented, I wondered why Oracle's products and investments did not always take advantage of those white spaces.
It's not the time to bicker. Oracle and the whole tech industry has lost a disciplined operational executive and as a personal tribute, I have to add, we have lost a damn good analyst.
RIP.
Comments
RIP Mark Hurd
Larry Ellison hinted at this in his keynote at Oracle OpenWorld last month. He joked he did not have many friends and that he would hate to lose Mark Hurd. In a corny way that was quite a tribute to the man, who at 62 passed away way too young.
Over the years I had come to respect the man - we had conversations around complex supply chains and global policy matters. Most people did not realize how analytical he was and made Oracle marketing a digital marvel and made their sales organization much younger. He had an interesting presentation style and preferred to come off the stage and podium - that puzzled some folks but I thought it was humble of him to come down to the level of his audience.
His presentations always invoked data on market trends. Which is where I did not always see eye to eye with him. Given the market opportunities he presented, I wondered why Oracle's products and investments did not always take advantage of those white spaces.
It's not the time to bicker. Oracle and the whole tech industry has lost a disciplined operational executive and as a personal tribute, I have to add, we have lost a damn good analyst.
RIP Mark Hurd
Larry Ellison hinted at this in his keynote at Oracle OpenWorld last month. He joked he did not have many friends and that he would hate to lose Mark Hurd. In a corny way that was quite a tribute to the man, who at 62 passed away way too young.
Over the years I had come to respect the man - we had conversations around complex supply chains and global policy matters. Most people did not realize how analytical he was and made Oracle marketing a digital marvel and made their sales organization much younger. He had an interesting presentation style and preferred to come off the stage and podium - that puzzled some folks but I thought it was humble of him to come down to the level of his audience.
His presentations always invoked data on market trends. Which is where I did not always see eye to eye with him. Given the market opportunities he presented, I wondered why Oracle's products and investments did not always take advantage of those white spaces.
It's not the time to bicker. Oracle and the whole tech industry has lost a disciplined operational executive and as a personal tribute, I have to add, we have lost a damn good analyst.
RIP.
October 18, 2019 in Industry Commentary | Permalink