|
|
To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu
-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
|
Jonathan Schwartz on the future of Sun By Stephen Shankland, CNET News.com May 23, 2007 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/insight/software/soa/Jonathan-Schwartz-on-the-future-of-Sun/0,139023769,339277736,00.htm
newsmaker After just over a year as chief executive, Jonathan Schwartz is moving into a new phase as the leader of Sun Microsystems. Much of his opening months was spent emerging from the shadow of the highly visible Scott McNealy, boosted by Schwartz's high-profile blog. Now that the introductory period is over, Schwartz is working to show that the Silicon Valley stalwart can regain its former stature.
As Schwartz (pic) points out, Sun's stock has risen 28 percent in the year since he took over as CEO, though he credits his predecessor for the improvement. But the company has its challenges. A strong close to 2006 was followed by a spotty, if still profitable, opening to 2007, with revenue of US$3.28 billion and net income of US$67 million. Schwartz is bringing his software imprint to the company, aggressively embracing the free and open-source programming movement, preferably with the upcoming version 3 of the General Public License (GPL). He's even trying to rebuild Sun's lacklustre storage business by engaging with programmers interested in storage software. In a perfect Schwartz world, all customer interactions would begin with a conversation about Sun's Solaris operating system. During Sun's JavaOne software conference earlier this month, Schwartz spoke with CNET News.com about his first year and the future of Sun. Q: What's your own assessment of how well you've done the first year?
The success of the OpenSolaris community -- the fact that we have been able to drive nearly 8 million downloads in the past two years and 70 percent of those have been onto HP, Dell and IBM hardware -- is a validation of our focus. Secondarily, looking at our financial metrics, I feel pretty good. We have expanded gross margins, we've grown the top line (revenue), we generated a GAAP [Generally Accepted Accounting Principles] profit two quarters early. There's a lot more to do. We're a US$14 billion company in what looks like a US$2 trillion marketplace, and it seems like we've got some more growing to do. We can always be more efficient than we are right now and we've still got some work to do there. Would you give yourself an A, B, C, D or F?
A lot of your financial recovery has been in part because you bought a lot of revenue by acquiring StorageTek and you recovered somewhat at least in your bread-and-butter server business. What about all these other projects -- Solaris and open-source software in general, storage, the Sun Grid?
We will continue to invest on the edges of innovation. But at US$13 billion to US$14 billion in scale, to have a material impact on Sun, you're going to have US$1.3 billion or US$1.4 billion of revenue. That's not going to happen from any new initiative necessarily in a quarter or two or three. I would claim the single most important element in the resurgence of Sun has not been the rise not of our server business, but the rise of our Solaris business. Solaris is now firmly established as the definition of scale and security and robust Web-scale operation. We still have some work to do -- I'm still not pleased with how accessible it is to new developers or the number of college kids that are running it, but in terms of its position in the enterprise, that at this point is unassailable. You derive some services revenue from software. Can you break out how much you get from Solaris?
When are you going to do that?
How do you assess the financial effect of the open-source moves? I know you count downloads and you pay attention to who's blogging about what. I'm trying to tie that to the bottom line and the top line.
We have to look at the market in terms of what's it worth to get developers to adopt a platform. If we held a JavaOne and no one showed up, I'd probably short the stock, but when you have a developer event and the world shows up, that must mean we're doing something right. In my view that means we're continuing to enhance the relevance of Sun to the planet. But again, how do you tie that to the top and bottom line?
You've had trouble regaining currency among the start-ups who favoured you in the dot-com era. Why?
When the fish are jumping in the boat and you're focused on building the biggest boat in the world, you don't tend to focus as much as much on navigation as you ought to. Believe me, we had our near-death experience. We're very focused on navigation. We know what customers we care about, we know the trends we care about and we're going to make sure that we don't have that experience again. How much of Sun's recovery is due to the prior administration under Scott McNealy and how much is your doing?
You're a visionary kind of guy. Is worrying about operational efficiency a tedious slog?
In Don MacAskill's blog on (photo-sharing site) SmugMug, he complained about how he has to re-engage with you guys every time he wants a buy another server.
I've a suspicion, yes.
You have this very publicly stated goal of four percent operating margin in the final quarter of your fiscal year, which is right now ... What are the consequences -- and likewise with the 10 percent goal for fiscal 2009 -- if you don't meet that?
As you try to go from your US$14 billion annual revenue toward the US$2 trillion in annual information technology spending, do you have too many irons in the fire?
If you look at our hardware platforms, we are reducing the number of form factors. If you want to pick Intel, AMD or Sparc you can do so with the same infrastructure, the same frames, the same racks, the same power systems, the same thermals. We're building things around a uniform definition of what the future holds and what we are going to present to the marketplace. You said you're converging to a common open-source licence, the GPL?
Do you see yourself as the embodiment of Sun? Obviously, to a certain extent you're the public representative of the company.
A Sun leader has courage, and courage is the courage to innovate, the courage to collaborate, the courage to act with integrity -- because that actually does take some courage -- and the courage to do so with pace. You've got to be willing to brook the criticism and the critique from those who don't see the world the way you do. When people look back at who is Sun, they are not looking me; they are looking at 35,000 people. In Silicon Valley, there is an image of the cowboy CEO, with the personality, the high profile -- Larry Ellison, Scott McNealy, Steve Jobs. Do you think that's dangerous?
I hesitate to suggest that you might be slipping into that category, partly because of your visibility. Don't take it with disrespect, but you're a loudmouth. You talk about things, you jump into conversations, you try to provoke people into engaging in some kind of conversation.
I don't think that's necessarily what customers want or what shareholders want. I want to do a good job of building a leadership culture at Sun. There are a lot of people who have blogs at Sun, and I don't want there to be one voice to the marketplace, but I want that somewhere in that cacophony to be a very clear and consistent message: here is what we're all about, here is what we can do and here is how we are going to march forward.
Copyright © 2009 CBS Interactive, a CBS Company. All Rights Reserved. |