Essay

All of you have probably read quite a bit about the world’s wealthiest man—Bill Gates. But some of you are probably not nearly as familiar with Bill Gates’s main rival and world’s seventh wealthiest man, former Oracle CEO Larry Ellison. Ellison recently retired as Chief Executive officer (CEO) but is still active as the chair of Oracle’s board of directors. Unlike Gates, who is relatively reserved, Ellison is known for his extravagant lifestyle and boastful interviews.

The rivalry between Ellison and Gates is legendary, but not quite as much is known about Ellison’s leadership style. He has been described as a “jerk,” and his managerial style has been described as “take no prisoners.” While he is unquestionably a powerful leader, he has also been criticized for spending a lot of time playing golf while leaving many leadership duties to his subordinates.

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For this assignment, read up on leadership traits, leadership behaviors, and leadership styles in the required background materials. Then read up on Larry Ellison and find as much as you can about his personality and leadership style. Finally, try to apply what you’ve read in the required background materials about leadership traits, behaviors, and styles to what you found out about Larry Ellison.

Here are some articles to get you started on your research about Ellison:

Hymowitz, C. (2005). Working fewer hours is hard for most CEOs, but some find a way. Wall Street Journal, p. B1.

Leibovich, M. (2000). The outsider, his business and his billions series: The new imperialists: Larry Ellison, oracle until himself. The Washington Post, p. A1.

Mendleson, R. (2010). Why it pays to be a jerk. Canadian Business, 83(18), 28-30, 32, 34.

Watch the following video:

Fox Business. (2018, October 25). Larry Ellison: I had all the disadvantages necessary for success [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrZoRNSQSPw

Case Assignment

Once you are finished with your research on Ellison and have thoroughly reviewed the background materials on leadership traits, behaviors, and styles, write a 3-page paper to include 3 scholarly sources addressing the questions below. For each answer, make sure to cite at least one of the Case Assignment articles listed on this page as well as one of the required textbook chapters from the background materials from Hiriyappa (2009), or Bauer & Erdogan (2012).

1. How would you describe Ellison’s leadership style?

2. How would you describe Ellison’s personality and leadership traits?

3. Would you describe Ellison’s behavior as being task-oriented, or people/relationship-oriented?

4. Would you describe Ellison’s leadership style as diverse and inclusive? If so or if not, please explain your response.

Assignment Expectations

1. Your Case Assignment should be at least 3 pages in length (excluding title and reference pages).

2.

Be sure to cite and reference (using APA Style) a minimum of 3 scholarly sources listed in the Course Materials and Bibliography

Working Fewer Hours Is Hard for Most CEOs, But
Some Find a Way

Hymowitz, Carol . Wall Street Journal , Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]12 July 2005: B.1.

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ABSTRACT (ABSTRACT)
LARRY ELLISON, chief executive of Oracle, rejects a management model he thinks too many chief executives

follow of being “weak kings with strong dukes.” Under this model, he says, CEOs allow business unit heads “to run

their own show as long as they make their profit numbers.” The CEOs may not know what’s really going on in

Japan or Chicago, he argues, and “it isn’t terribly efficient since not everyone is following centralized processes.”

MICHAEL ESKEW, CEO of United Parcel Service, has told some colleagues that ideally he’d like to divide his time

into five parts, spending 20% with employees, 20% with customers, 20% with investors, 20% on civic activities and

20% on self-renewal. “Unfortunately it hasn’t worked out as well as he’d like when it comes to time for himself to

learn new things,” says Ken Sternad, vice president, public relations. Still, Mr. Eskew, who has diversified UPS from

a package- delivery to a broader services company, tells his managers that achieving balance is an important part

of leadership. “He says, ‘You should take your job seriously, your family seriously and your community seriously,

but just don’t take yourself too seriously,’ ” says Mr. Sternad.

“Everything I do now, I really enjoy doing, think I’m reasonably good at, and will keep doing for some time to come,”

he says. But relying on underlings to oversee bigger chunks of the business is the easy part of curtailing work, he

admits. “An awful lot of my work is just thinking about the business and that’s tricky” to turn off, he says. “I can’t

just stop thinking about what we should do in this industry.”

FULL TEXT
LARRY ELLISON, chief executive of Oracle, rejects a management model he thinks too many chief executives

follow of being “weak kings with strong dukes.” Under this model, he says, CEOs allow business unit heads “to run
their own show as long as they make their profit numbers.” The CEOs may not know what’s really going on in
Japan or Chicago, he argues, and “it isn’t terribly efficient since not everyone is following centralized processes.”

But Mr. Ellison doesn’t want to be the king at court all the time, either. Since completing his bitterly fought $10.6

billion takeover of PeopleSoft, Oracle’s largest acquisition ever, earlier this year, he has cut his work hours to 40 to

50 a week from about 80. “I decided this [much work] is crazy,” says the billionaire software maker, who delegates

more day-to-day responsibilities to his three co-presidents and devotes more time to sailboat racing, his medical

foundation and other interests.

In an age when executives sleep with their BlackBerrys on their night stands so they can respond to email 24/7,

cutting back at work isn’t always feasible. It certainly isn’t an option for newly named CEOs, such as Mark Hurd at

Hewlett-Packard and John Mack at Morgan Stanley, who must fashion new corporate strategies or overcome

internal culture wars.

Even veteran CEOs at solidly performing companies have trouble getting off the work treadmill or don’t want to

admit they have, afraid they may be judged uncommitted by investors or may send employees the message that

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they, too, can work less. “There’s a relentlessness to being a CEO these days,” says Niko Canner, managing partner

of New York consultant Katzenbach Partners. “Still, a few savvier heads of companies worry about the emotional

and physical sustainability” of their schedules and wonder “what things they need to do for themselves to stay

focused, energized and inspiring.”

MICHAEL ESKEW, CEO of United Parcel Service, has told some colleagues that ideally he’d like to divide his time
into five parts, spending 20% with employees, 20% with customers, 20% with investors, 20% on civic activities and
20% on self-renewal. “Unfortunately it hasn’t worked out as well as he’d like when it comes to time for himself to
learn new things,” says Ken Sternad, vice president, public relations. Still, Mr. Eskew, who has diversified UPS from
a package- delivery to a broader services company, tells his managers that achieving balance is an important part
of leadership. “He says, ‘You should take your job seriously, your family seriously and your community seriously,
but just don’t take yourself too seriously,’ ” says Mr. Sternad.

For some, achieving this kind of balance is more possible some years than others. Edwin Thomas, CEO of Asbury

Services, a retirement- communities company, skipped his summer vacation last year because his business was

adding and redesigning facilities. But he just returned from a two-week trip to Europe with his family. “I think you

need the first week just to unwind and the second to be there,” says Mr. Thomas, who stayed connected via his

BlackBerry. “Next year, I just may leave that at home,” he adds.

He has also curbed his impulse to go to the office on weekends by moving to a home that is 25 minutes away.

“When I lived five minutes from the office, I was always there on Saturday,” he says. He traveled a lot when his

children were young, he says, “but I reached a point in my 40s where I said, ‘I’m going to leave work when my

daughter has a volleyball game or my son has a soccer game.’ ” By intentionally limiting his office schedule, Mr.

Thomas believes he’s more focused, creative and productive when he’s at work.

ORACLE’S MR. ELLISON, a demanding leader who has in the past turned a cold shoulder on once-trusted

lieutenants, says he cut back by delegating what he least enjoys doing to his three co-presidents, Gregory Maffei,

who is also Oracle’s chief financial officer and in charge of such functions as human resources, manufacturing and

distribution; Safra Catz, who oversees business development, including mergers and acquisitions; and Charles

Phillips, who oversees customer relations.

Mr. Ellison, who will turn 61 years old next month, still confers directly with executives at General Electric, Oracle’s

biggest commercial customer. “I’m still the corporate sponsor with GE and sit in on their management meetings” to

work out implementation of Oracle software, he says. But he’s less involved with sales to other customers than he

used to be.

That’s not the case when it comes to developing and strategizing about the company’s software products,

however. “I’ve run engineering from Day One, and still do,” says Mr. Ellison, who put himself through college as a

software programmer and then quit to become an entrepreneur.

“Everything I do now, I really enjoy doing, think I’m reasonably good at, and will keep doing for some time to come,”
he says. But relying on underlings to oversee bigger chunks of the business is the easy part of curtailing work, he
admits. “An awful lot of my work is just thinking about the business and that’s tricky” to turn off, he says. “I can’t

just stop thinking about what we should do in this industry.”

Email comments to inthelead@wsj.com. To see other recent columns, go to CareerJournal.com.

DETAILS

Subject: Working hours; Chief executive officers; Executives

Business indexing term: Subject: Working hours Chief executive officers Executives

Classification: 2120: Chief executive officers

Publication title: Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.

Pages: B.1

Publication year: 2005

Publication date: Jul 12, 2005

column: IN THE LEAD

Publisher: Dow Jones &Company Inc

Place of publication: New York, N.Y.

Country of publication: United States, New York, N.Y.

Publication subject: Business And Economics–Banking And Finance

ISSN: 00999660

Source type: Newspapers

Language of publication: English

Document type: Commentary

ProQuest document ID: 398920351

Document URL: https://search.proquest.com/newspapers/working-fewer-hours-is-hard-most-ceos-

some-find/docview/398920351/se-2?accountid=28844

Copyright: Copyright (c) 2005, Dow Jones &Company Inc. Reproduced with permission of

copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without

permission.

Last updated: 2020-11-20

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  • Working Fewer Hours Is Hard for Most CEOs, But Some Find a Way
  • WHY IT PAYS TO BE A JERK
  • Mendleson, Rachel . Canadian Business ; Toronto  Vol. 83, Iss. 18,  (Nov 8, 2010): 28-30,32,34.

    ProQuest document link

    ABSTRACT
    Since co-founding the Redwood Shores, CA-based Oracle in 1977, CEO Larry Ellison’s antics, which have included

    everything from hiring a private investigator to snoop through Microsoft’s garbage to unceremoniously punting a

    series of would-be successors to his throne, have earned him the distinction of Silicon Valley’s consummate

    meanie. The incredible success that he has enjoyed is a marvel to anyone familiar with the accepted literature on

    what it takes to make a great leader, qualities like empathy, mediation skills and humility. Ellison acknowledges

    that he needs a foil. Leaving the traditional management duties to trusted associates, says psychoanalyst Michael

    Maccoby, author of Narcissistic Leaders: The Incredible Pros, The Inevitable Cons, has enabled him to focus on

    thinking big — a crucial element for success in today’s tech world. As Oracle increasingly dominated in database

    software and began to move to applications and, most recently, hardware, experts agree that Ellison’s willingness

    to buy out the competition has been essential to sustaining growth.

    FULL TEXT
     

    Headnote

    The success of Larry Ellison and what it says about leadership

    On the battlefield of Silicon Valley, it takes a lot to distinguish oneself as more bloodthirsty than the rest. But in

    recent months, Oracle CEO and founder Larry Ellison reminded observers why, even in an industry dominated by

    barbarians, he has earned a reputation as a first-class SOB.

    In early August, Ellison launched a public attack on Hewlett-Packard, throwing what had for decades been an

    amicable business relationship into jeopardy with a few choice words. Following the ousting of CEO Mark Hurd,

    who was forced to step down after a sexual harassment inquiry, Ellison lashed out at HP in an e-mail to The New

    York Times. HP board just made the worst personnel decision since the idiots on the Apple board fired Steve Jobs

    many years ago,” he wrote, invoking one of the most infamous board blunders in tech industry lore. Ellison argued

    that the company’s decision to make public the sexual harassment claims, which had been proven “utterly false,”

    constituted “cowardly corporate political correctness.” And if there’s one thing Ellison can’t abide, it’s pansy-

    picking ninnies interfering with genius at work.

    His assault on HP continued through September, when he hired Hurd, a close personal friend, as co-president of

    Oracle (a title he’ll share with Safra Catz, who has been Ellison’s second-in-command since 2004.) The move

    prompted HP to launch a lawsuit over concerns about the protection of its trade secrets. The legal dispute was

    quickly resolved, with both firms pledging to mend fences, but it wasn’t long before Ellison went about tearing

    them down again. When HP tapped Léo Apotheker, the former CEO of SAP, Oracle’s archrival in business-

    application programs, as its new commander-in-chief, Ellison charged HP with “[picking] a guy who was recently

    fired because he did such a bad job of running SAP,” and called for the board’s immediate, “en masse” resignation.

    All of which, onlookers agree, is classic Ellison. Bloomberg Businessweek described the outbursts as a return to

    his “old strategy of ridiculing the competition”; the Associated Press, meanwhile, noted that he “thrives on.

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    ..insulting rivals in public.”

    Since co-founding the Redwood Shores, Calif.-based Oracle in 1977, Ellison’s antics, which have included

    everything from hiring a private investigator to snoop through Microsoft’s garbage to unceremoniously punting a
    series of would-be successors to his throne, have earned him the distinction of Silicon Valley’s consummate

    meanie. “Ellison,” observes Karen Southwick in her unauthorized 2003 biography Everyone Else Must Fail, “is like a

    modernday Genghis Khan who has elevated ruthlessness in business to a carefully cultivated art form. His

    weapons are not the marauding hordes but his company’s possession of a key technology platform, his

    willingness to exploit it, and his disdain for anyone who gets in his way.”

    The incredible success that he has enjoyed is a marvel to anyone familiar with the accepted literature on what it

    takes to make a great leader, qualities like empathy, mediation skills and humility. By all accounts, he is a bad

    listener and a big talker, whose brash, take-no-prisoners approach tends to alienate employees and customers

    alike. Yet, in the past 35 years, the jet-flying, sailboat-racing renegade has built Oracle into one of the most

    important tech firms on the planet, with annual revenues of $27 billion-about a billion dollars shy of his personal

    fortune. (AU figures are in U.S. dollars.) While many of his contemporaries have moved to arms-length positions or

    other projects, Ellison remains the driving force behind the computing juggernaut, continuing to fashion it

    according to his own design. After acquiring more than 65 tech firms in the past five years, the mercurial CEO

    announced in September that he would be “buying chip companies,” suggesting that Oracle is positioning itself for

    what Bill Tatham, head of Toronto-based enterprise software firm NexJ Systems, describes as ‘another level of

    world domination.”

    But while it may be tempting to single out Ellison as the ruthless villain of high technology, “none of these guys are

    nice,” says Jeffrey Pfeffer, a business professor at Stanford University and author of Power: Why Some People

    Have It-And Others Don’t. Before his ousting from Apple, Steve Jobs is said to have become increasingly difficult to

    work with, refusing to acknowledge that sales were tumbling; since his return, he has often been criticized for his

    obsessive secrecy, and ruling the company with an iron fist. Meanwhile, it was Bill Gates’s attempt to snuff out the

    competition that led to antitrust allegations-and sent Ellison rooting through Microsoft’s trash. “It’s very unpopular

    to say in today’s world, where we have these Kumbaya theories of leadership,” says Pfeffer, “but it actually doesn’t

    work well.” If anything, Ellison is merely the poster boy for what it takes to thrive in an increasingly ruthless

    environment. His rare combination of hubris and self-awareness enables him to skid recklessly to the edge,

    stopping just short of the cliff. And his stunning trajectory offers a valuable lesson: in the cutthroat arena of big

    business, sometimes it pays to be a jerk.

    When asked to explain why he is the way he is, Ellison, who declined our request for an interview, has been known

    to scoff at obvious theories. “So my biological mother abandoned me, and my mother who raised me abandoned

    me when she died of cancer,” he told The Washington Post in 2000. “I’ve thought of all those things, and that just

    sounds so good, the reasons are all there. But is it really true?” But whatever caused his infamous bravado, the

    evidence suggests it took root early on.

    Born in Manhattan in 1944, Ellison’s unwed, teenage mother sent him to live with her aunt and uncle on Chicago’s

    south side when he was nine months old. Even as a teenager, Ellison had a propensity to pump up the facts. “When

    reality was not interesting enough for him, he simply made up delightful and often plausible details as he went

    along,” writes Mike Wilson in his 1997 biography The Difference Between God And Larry Ellison (God Doesn’t Think

    He’s Larry Ellison). “His stories all had certain things in common: They were funny, they glorified Larry Ellison, and

    unless you had the authority to issue subpoenas, they were damned near impossible to disprove.” The alleged

    fabrications often centred on his education. Though he never graduated from collegehe dropped out of the

    University of Illinois and the University of Chicago-he regularly suggested otherwise, says first wife Adda Quinn.

    “He told me these big, whopping lies, and stuck to them,” she told The Washington Post. Indeed, The New York

    Times identified Ellison in 1988 as holding “B.S. and M.S. degrees in physics from the University of Chicago.”

    And while his tendency to embellish may have wreaked havoc on his personal life (he is currently on his fourth

    marriage), it proved a tremendous asset in Silicon Valley, enabling him to seem like a competitor long before he

    actually was one. After bouncing between different computer programming jobs (he discovered his bent for

    programming at college, and reportedly carried a manual around with him), he secured a gig at Ampex, a firm that

    did contracts for the U.S. government, in the mid-1970s. There, he got his first taste of database software while

    working on a project for the CIA with the code name “Oracle.” Around the same time, he read a paper published by

    IBM, which outlined a way to make it easier to store and retrieve data-a prototype for the first relational database.

    “I saw the paper, and thought that, on the basis of this research, we could build a commercial system,” Ellison, who

    solicited the assistance of fellow programmers Bob Miner and Ed Oates, recalled in a 1995 interview. “If we were

    clever, we could take IBM’s research… and beat IBM to the marketplace with this technology. Because we thought

    we could move faster than they could.” He was right. By 1984, the company he founded with Miner and Oates,

    originally called Software Development Laboratories, was logging nearly $13 million in annual sales. (Miner died in

    1994; Oates retired in 1996.)

    Though Oracle’s critics have complained over the years about Ellison’s tendency to promise a product prematurely,

    or sacrifice quality for early delivery, he clearly understands the benefit of first-mover advantage. “Once Ellison

    anticipates something. ..to him it’s done,” writes Southwick. “Ellison is serene in his conviction. It’s a quality that

    has enabled much of his success as well as his difficulties with the rest of the world.”

    As Oracle’s influence has grown, so has Ellison’s bluster. By the mid-1990s, when Oracle had effectively neutered

    its competition, Ellison had begun making a sport of taking pot shots at Microsoft and its founder Bill Gates,

    though both were, by most measures, entirely out of his league. Ellison went so far as to declare in 1995 that the

    era of personal computing was over. But the fact that Ellison consistently bit off more than he could chew-Oracle

    has never outpaced Microsoft’s revenue, and the personal computing era lives on-is largely beside the point. “If

    Larry could make the world think there was a contest between him and Bill Gates,” Wilson told Canadian Business,

    “that was good for Larry and bad for Bill.” Pfeffer concurs: “A lot of this is posturing, but it works.” Ellison’s knack

    for intimidation appears to have been cultivated with a clear sense of its effect. “He knows he has a reputation for

    popping off and being provocative,” says Wilson, “and he likes that very much.” This fierce reputation is beneficial.

    “It intimidates. It scares people off,” says Pfeffer. “If he can get the competition to engage in peremptory surrender,

    all the better.”

    From the outset, Ellison’s oversized ego has made him shameless about highlighting the significance of his

    personal contribution to his company’s success. The sixth-richest person in the world, his net worth is currently

    estimated at $28 billion. In explaining why Ellison had majority ownership from the get-go (he initially purchased

    60% of the company’s shares, while his partners split the rest), Oates told Wilson, “There was no question about

    the fact that Larry was pushing this idea a lot harder than either Bob or I would have pushed it. He had more

    chutzpah than the two of us combined.” Geoff Squire, who ran various divisions of Oracle’s world operations from

    1984 to 1993, told Canadian Business that Ellison sketched out his plan to start with database software and move

    into tools and applications “years before any code was written on those areas…. Call it passion, call it visionthe

    confidence was definitely there.”

    On more than one occasion, Ellison has said that everyone wants to be loved,” including him-a peculiar statement

    considering the callousness with which he has been known to treat employees. He has no regard for anyone’s

    schedule but his own; even early in his career his tendency to show up at meetings 60 or 90 minutes behind

    schedule prompted employee Stuart Feigin to begin referring to him as “the late Larry Ellison.” Yet more damning

    than his lateness is his habit of casting off previously trusted executives, oftentimes shortly before their stock

    options are due to vest. Accounts of former Oracle employees paint a picture of a boss with an infectious energy,

    and a propensity to elevate his charges to incredible heights only to dump them later. As one journalist put it, “He’s

    like a juicer, he squeezes people dry and then discards them.” Employees are often tossed when they emerge as

    possible successors. Observers have suggested that Ray Lane, whose leadership was instrumental in pulling

    Oracle out of the red, was ousted because he was beginning to outshine his boss.

    But Squire has a different take. Describing the manner in which Ellison selected new programmers and

    salespeople as “clinical,” Squire attributes Oracle’s success largely to the premium he has always placed on

    choosing the right candidates. “He really did hire very, very good people,” says Squire. Though Squire

    acknowledges that Ellison could quickly turn on his charges-as he puts it, “He backs people until he doesn’t”he

    sees Ellison’s willingness to constantly refresh the talent pool as a strength. “People who do a great job don’t just

    get to stick around in companies forever,” says Squire, who is currently the non-executive chairman of Kognito, a

    U.K.-based data management firm. Despite the fact that he was cut loose shortly before the last of his stock

    options would have vested, Squire harbours no ill will, insisting that the fortune and experience he amassed at

    Oracle “set me up for life.” Squire’s trajectory is not unique: Oracle is often credited with creating the most

    millionaires in Silicon Valley; many of those ousted by Ellison went on to head tech firms that competed in the

    same highprofile realm. (Incidentally, in the midst of the Hurd debacle, Lane was named nonexecutive chairman of

    HP.)

    According to psychoanalyst Michael Maccoby, author of Narcissistic Leaders: The Incredible Pros, The Inevitable

    Cons, “What makes Ellison so successful, even though he’s a narcissist visionary and really not very good at

    working with people, is that he understands himself, and he understands who he needs to work with.” His self-

    awareness became particularly apparent in the early 1990s, when poor accounting practices led the company,

    which went public in 1986, to over-report revenues. In 1991, Oracle posted a loss of $12.4 million; its stock value,

    meanwhile, dropped from $3.8 billion to $700 million. Ellison, who before the crash, was known to brag about

    playing tennis on company time, and was so seldom at the office that, when he was spotted, employees joked

    about “Elvis sightings,” was shaken to the core. “I was too depressed f to leave the house],” he told The Washington

    Post, “I let everyone down.” But rather than let Oracle die, he swallowed his pride and “went out and got some

    better managers to run the company,” says Wilson.

    Ellison acknowledges that he needs a foil. Leaving the traditional management duties to trusted associates, says

    Maccoby, has enabled him to focus on thinking big-a crucial element for success in today’s tech world. “It allows

    him to be the visionary, the guy who determines what companies he’s going to buy and where he’s going to go,” he

    says. “He’s the strategic leader.”

    The aggressive way in which Oracle pursues expansion has prompted many to compare Ellison to a warlord. Of all

    the acquisitions the company has made over the years, none is more emblematic of his unapologetically

    conquering spirit than the hostile takeover of PeopleSoft he mounted in 2003. When Oracle announced it was

    gunning for the software firm with an unwelcome $5.1-billion offer, observers were stunned at the audacity of the

    move, which came as PeopleSoft was in the midst of inking its own $1.8 billion deal to acquire smaller software

    firm J.D. Edwards &Co. Adding to the drama was the fact that the man leading PeopleSoft’s defence was CEO

    Craig Conway, a disgruntled former Oracle employee. In 1999, Conway urged Siebel Systems founder and CEO Tom

    Siebel, another one-time Oracle associate embroiled in a public spat with Ellison, not to let his old boss get his

    goat, telling Forbes, “Larry picks a fight, and since everyone loves a fight, they come to watch.”

    Come watch they did. In the months that followed, Conway described Ellison as everything from a schoolyard bully

    to a sociopath. Ellison, for his part, remained clear in his intention: in acquiring PeopleSoft, he would abandon its

    product and most of its employees; what he was after, he said, was its customer base. When Conway compared

    his former boss’s plot to “me asking if I could buy your dog so I can go out back and shoot it,” Ellison was quick to

    issue a cutting retort. ‘I love animals,” he said. “If Craigy and [his dog] were standing next to each other and I only

    had one bullet, trust me, it wouldn’t be for the dog.” Ruthless though it may have seemed, none denied the

    brilliance of Ellison’s power play, and in the end, he emerged victorious. In 2004, PeopleSoft’s board fired Conway,

    and sold the farm to Ellison for $11 billion. (Oracle acquired Siebel Systems the following year.)

    As Oracle increasingly dominated in database software and began to move to applications and, most recently,

    hardware, experts agree that Ellison’s willingness to buy out the competition has been essential to sustaining

    growth. “This is an industry in which basically growth has slowed to a crawl. The only way.. .you as a company can

    make progress is by acquisitions,” says Stanford’s Pfeffer, who points out that HP and Microsoft have also made

    careers of gobbling up the little guys. “[Ellison] sees the software world as consolidating, and he wants to be the

    consolidator rather than consolidatee.” Ellison’s perceived ruthlessness stems, in part, from a few juicy quotes that

    have been frequently repeated in the press. But Ellison often argues his words were twisted. In 1988, The New York

    Times reported that he identified his ideal vicepresident as Genghis Khan, paraphrasing the Mongol leader’s

    famous mantra: “It is not sufficient that I succeed-all others must fail.” (Hence the title of Southwick’s book.) Ten

    years later, in an interview with Forbes, Ellison maintained that the quote had been taken out of context, arguing

    that he had merely been relaying a conversation he’d had with a Fujitsu executive during one of his many trips to

    Japan. But in reiterating what the businessman had told him, he wound up adding more fuel to the fire. ‘We in

    Japan think that our competitors are taking rice out of our children’s mouths,” he repeated, adding another phrase

    to the lexicon of inflammatory statements regularly attributed to him.

    That Ellison’s $70-million mansion in Woodside, Calif., is modelled after a medieval shogun compound, and his

    office is plastered with Japanese art, certainly compounds his image as a wannabe Mongol warlord. But the main

    reason it is so tempting to use snippets like these to explain his strategy is that they fit so well. In the early days of

    Oracle, Ellison is said to have been “obsessed with the 100% [growth] figure,” rewarding those who exceeded their

    sales targets with gold coins. If he’s seen as prizing victory above all else, it’s because, well, he does.

    When the Hollywood version of the Marvel comic Iron Man was released in 2008, observers were quick to note the

    similarity between Tony Stark, the hero’s alter ego, and Oracle’s leading man. Everything from Ellison’s manicured

    goatee to his Audi R8 seemed to suggest that the real-life billionaire had inspired the fictional one. It was a

    comparison that the CEO didn’t appear to mind: Ellison even made a cameo appearance in the sequel. But there is

    a lesson in the dizzying speed with which Stark tumbles when, overcome by ego, he make a few very bad calls.

    According to Charles O’Reilly, an expert in organizational leadership at Stanford, a cocksure attitude can have

    dramatic consequences. “When they’re right, everybody loves them,” he says of leaders like Ellison. “But it only

    takes one major mistake and you can destroy the company.”

    As for Ellison’s recent decisions, however, they appear to be spot on. Following the news that he had hired Hurd, a

    veteran executive, Oracle’s stock rose 5.5%; HP’s shares, meanwhile, slipped by 1%. Though it remains to be seen

    how long Hurd will keep his post-Pfeffer, for one, wonders if there won’t be “too much ego per square inch” -there is

    no indication that Ellison is preparing to turn over the reins anytime soon. “I think he honestly believes that he’s

    doing a better job than anyone else could do,” says Squire, “and I think he’s probably right.”

    Sidebar

    IF I HAD ONE BULLET TRUST ME, IT WOULDN’T BE FOR THE DOG

    DETAILS

    Subject: Personality traits; Corporate profiles; Management styles; Chief executive officers;

    Business growth; Employment; Acquisitions &mergers; Software industry

    Business indexing term: Subject: Management styles Chief executive officers Business growth Employment

    Acquisitions &mergers Software industry; Corporation: New York Times Co

    Location: United States–US

    People: Ellison, Lawrence

    Company / organization: Name: Oracle Corp; NAICS: 511210

    Classification: 9190: United States; 8302: Software &computer services industry; 2120: Chief

    executive officers; 2200: Managerial skills; 2330: Acquisitions &mergers; 9110:

    Company specific

    Publication title: Canadian Business; Toronto

    Volume: 83

    Issue: 18

    Pages: 28-30,32,34

    Number of pages: 5

    Publication year: 2010

    Publication date: Nov 8, 2010

    Section: FEATURES

    Publisher: St. Joseph Communications

    Place of publication: Toronto

    Country of publication: Canada, Toronto

    Publication subject: Business And Economics

    ISSN: 00083100

    e-ISSN: 22928421

    CODEN: CABUDO

    LINKS
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    Database copyright  2021 ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved.
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    Source type: Magazines

    Language of publication: English

    Document type: Cover Story

    Document feature: Photographs

    ProQuest document ID: 762526250

    Document URL: https://search.proquest.com/magazines/why-pays-be-jerk/docview/762526250/se-

    2?accountid=28844

    Copyright: Copyright Rogers Publishing Limited Nov 8, 2010

    Last updated: 2020-11-18

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