Misplaced Pages

Léo Apotheker: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 21:40, 24 November 2012 editMro (talk | contribs)363 edits Undid revision 524700119 by 70.79.64.73 (talk) spam← Previous edit Revision as of 02:12, 25 November 2012 edit undoCaroOlsen (talk | contribs)12 edits Jaes - Read before your write ! Mro - please review the "spam "definition"Next edit →
Line 69: Line 69:
* *
* *
*


{{S-start}} {{S-start}}

Revision as of 02:12, 25 November 2012

Léo Apotheker
Born (1953-09-18) 18 September 1953 (age 71)
Aachen, Germany
NationalityGerman
EducationHebrew University
Occupation(s)Board member, Schneider Electric SA
Known forCEO, Hewlett-Packard
(2010-2011)
CEO, SAP AG
(2008-2010)
Board member ofSchneider Electric SA
Steria
GT Nexus
PlaNet Finance

Léo Apotheker (born September 18, 1953, in Aachen, Germany) is a German business executive. He served briefly as the chief executive officer of Hewlett-Packard from November 2010 until his firing in September 2011. He also served as co-chief executive officer of SAP from April 2008 until he resigned in February 2010 following a decision by that company to not renew his contract.

During his tenure as chief executive at HP, the company lost more than $30 billion in market capitalization after a series of strategic missteps by the company, leading to his resignation. At SAP, which he joined in 1988 and where he spent more than twenty years, he played an instrumental role in developing and implementing a number of significant changes.

Apotheker currently sits on the board of Schneider Electric SA, Steria, GT Nexus, and PlaNet Finance - a non-profit organization. Apotheker is fluent in five languages—German, Dutch, French, English and Hebrew.

Early life and education

Apotheker's parents were Polish Jews who fled to the Russo-Chinese border after the Nazis invaded Poland at the outbreak of World War II. After the war, they settled in Aachen, Germany, where Léo Apotheker was born on September 18, 1953. He later moved to Antwerp, Belgium.

By his own account, he organized a student strike in high school, and had two of his teeth knocked out by a policeman on horseback in the melee that followed. At the age of 18 he moved to Israel where he studied economics at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

Career

Early career and SAP: 1988 - 2010

Prior to joining SAP in 1988, Apotheker held several financial and operations positions at European companies.

After joining SAP, he held positions of increasing responsibility; and in 1995 was promoted to CEO and founder of SAP France and SAP Belgium. Later in 1997, he became the president of SAP's South West Europe region; and by 1999, president of SAP EMEA (Europe, Middle East, and Africa) sales region.

He joined the SAP AG executive board in 2002, and served as the president of global customer solutions and operations from 2002 to 2007. He was appointed deputy CEO in 2007; and promoted to co-CEO of the company in April 2008 to ensure a smooth handover from his predecessor, Henning Kagermann, when the latter's contract with the company expired. The succession plan was communicated in the business media early in 2008, including Forbes magazine. The transition received praise as an example of SAP's corporate culture, "a seemingly contradictory mix of internal consensus and competition".

Apotheker's appointment to lead SAP was the second occasion, after 1997 Ron Sommer's appointment as CEO of Deutsche Telekom, that a large German company was run by a Jewish executive whose parents escaped the Holocaust. “If SAP had a pre-war history, I would never have joined the company,” he told The Economist.

Apotheker took an early opportunity to set out his vision for the IT industry, and explained enterprise software in layman's terms (likening it to the human nervous system), in an interview with prominent American journalist Charlie Rose. He also articulated SAP's commitment to sustainability.

On February 7, 2010, the SAP supervisory board reached an agreement with Apotheker not to extend his contract as a member of the SAP executive board. With this decision, he stepped down as CEO and resigned from SAP.

Hewlett-Packard: 2010 - 2011

On September 30, 2010, the Board of Directors of Hewlett-Packard announced the election of Apotheker as the company's Chief Executive Officer and President, effective November 1. He succeeded Cathie Lesjak, who served as the company's interim CEO since August 6, following the abrupt departure of former CEO Mark Hurd. Hurd had been forced to resign after an internal investigation into a sexual harassment (that found him not guilty) claim uncovered expense-account irregularities.

During Apotheker's tenure at HP the stock dropped about 40%. It dropped nearly 25% on 19 August 2011, after HP announced a number of seemingly abrupt strategic decision: to discontinue its webOS device business (mobile phones and tablet computers), to begin planning to divest its personal computer division, and to acquire British software firm Autonomy for a significant premium. Over the months following Apotheker's departure, HP eventually spun-off the remaining webOS assets into a new subsidiary, Gram; backtracked on any plans to spin-off its personal computer division; and wrote-down almost $9 billion related to the Autonomy acquisition, which it indicated was due to a lack of due diligence during the acquisition process under Apotheker.

On September 22, 2011, the HP Board of Directors replaced Apotheker as chief executive, effective immediately, with fellow board member and former eBay chief Meg Whitman. Though Apotheker served barely ten months, he received over $13 million in compensation: a severance payment of $7.2 million, shares worth $3.56 million, and a performance bonus of $2.4 million, although the company lost more than $30 billion in market capitalization during his tenure.

After HP: 2011 to present

After HP, Apotheker returned to Paris. He, along with some private equity firms in Silicon Valley, are considering to invest in mature and distressed companies. In March 2012, he appeared on a conference call, hosted by Nomura Securities analyst Rick Sherlund.

On June 1, 2012, he was appointed as an independent director to board of the Paris based information technology services provider, Steria.

He currently sits on the supervisory boards of Schneider Electric SA, Steria, and GT Nexus. He is also a board member of PlaNet Finance - a non-profit organization.

Personal life

He is married and his wife is a Hebrew-speaking Belgian.

See also

References

  1. http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/sap-founder-hasso-plattner-it-was-a-shock-that-something-like-this-could-happen-a-677851.html
  2. "Hewlett-Packard replaces Leo Apotheker with Meg Whitman". BBC News. 09-22-2011. Retrieved 22 September 2011. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Aaron Ricadela (2010-10-01). "Hewlett-Packard Names Leo Apotheker CEO". Bloomberg. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  4. ^ L.S. and M.G. (2010-10-01). "The Léo Way". The Economist. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  5. "SAP names Leo Apotheker as co-CEO". Forbes Magazine. 2008-04-02. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  6. "The Other Transition". Vol. 390, no. 8612. The Economist. 2009-01-03. p. 49. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  7. The Economist (December 30 2008).
  8. Charlie Rose Show (January 6 2009).
  9. VNUnet.com (November 11 2008).
  10. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/leo-apotheker-named-ceo-and-president-of-hp-2010-09-30?reflink=MW_news_stmp
  11. Jordan Robertson and Rachel Metz (2010-08-06). "HP CEO Mark Hurd Resigns After Sexual-Harassment Probe". Huffington Post.
  12. "HPQ stock since naming Leo Apotheker CEO".
  13. "HP names Meg Whitman as CEO".
  14. New Hewlett-Packard chief Meg Whitman gets $1 salary, Leo Apotheker gets $13m, The Australian, sept. 30 2011
  15. http://gigaom.com/2012/03/01/is-leo-apotheker-launching-a-comeback/
  16. "The arrival of Leo Apotheker and Laetitia Puyfaucher will strengthen Steria's supervisory board". Steria. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  17. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3965498,00.html

External links

Business positions
Preceded byMark Hurd Chief Executive Officer of Hewlett-Packard
2010–2011
Succeeded byMeg Whitman
President of Hewlett-Packard
2010–2011
Hewlett-Packard
Founders
Directors
Executive
officers
  • Meg Whitman
  • Todd Bradley
  • Dave Donatelli
  • Martin Fink
  • Henry Gomez
  • John Hinshaw
  • Marty Homlish
  • George Kadifa
  • Tracy Keogh
  • Cathie Lesjak
  • Mike Nefkens
  • Antonio Neri
  • John F. Schultz
  • Bill Veghte
Computer
hardware
products
HPE
Servers
Storage
HP Inc.
Business laptops
Business desktops
Consumer PCs
Consumer electronics
and accessories
Photography and printing
Other divisions
Software
Discontinued
products
Compaq line
Software
Services
Hardware
Closed divisions
HP CEOs
Assets
See also

Template:Persondata

Categories: