Be Bold Podcast: The Importance of Mentorship - Episode 2
Mentors: How to pick a great one to advance your career.
If you’re looking for a career accelerator, listen to this episode of the Be Bold podcast, during which Juniper’s Manoj Leelanivas talks with industry veteran Craig Conway about the importance of mentorship for professional growth. Craig has been the CEO of three tech companies and served as an executive at Oracle. Here, he discusses his own career journey and the role mentors played in it.
And don’t miss the first episode of the Be Bold podcast on the importance of diversity in the workplace.
You’ll learn
Craig’s tips for picking a mentor and building trust
What it takes to establish successful mentor relationships
How to encourage employees, both new and seasoned, to take advantage of mentorship opportunities
Who is this for?
Host
Guest speakers
Transcript
0:00 and she said Craig there is
0:05 four words that human beings can't resist
0:11 whether it's a taxi driver whether it's a customer whether it's a supplier
0:17 I said what are those four words she said will you help me
0:23 she said those words virtually universally trigger a response
0:30 in people to help you [Music]
0:38 thank you welcome to the b-ball podcast my name is
0:45 Manoj lilanibas Chief Operating Officer Juniper Networks today
0:51 I have the pleasure of speaking with industry veteran Craig Conway he's been the CEO of three tech companies
0:57 including PeopleSoft and before that served as an executive as some of the
1:02 most successful companies in the industry including Oracle Craig also serves on the board of
1:09 directors of an iconic Silicon Valley company Salesforce
1:14 on today's show we'll be talking about Craig's carrier journey and the role mentors had on it
1:20 we'll also discuss his own approach to mentoring others including how to pick a mentor and build
1:27 trust Craig it's a pleasure to have you on the show today thank you very much Manoj can
1:33 you walk us through your career trajectory starting from your Early College days and how the journey
1:39 unfolded you know for me all of our stories are like that book outliers remember Malcolm Gladwell wrote that
1:46 book outliers I do um it was a great book and he he went out and he interviewed people that
1:51 achieved some degree of success in their career it wasn't just wasn't just business people it was Sports people and
1:57 public service and Military and business people uh to find out what they had in
2:03 common and I think he started the book by saying he expected that he would find you know High Intelligence or drive or
2:10 passion and what and what he found that everybody that had achieved some
2:15 degree of of success had was three things being in the right place
2:21 at the right time with the right skill set and you know some of that is luck being
2:28 in the right place at the right time and I think that's really how I would characterize my whole career I started you know you asked by my college degree
2:35 I went to college at the State University of New York a state college in Rochester New York and
2:43 I chose that college because it was one of the only colleges in the country that
2:50 had a computer science degree and coming out of college in 1976 with a computer
2:58 science degree was um sort of the start of being in the
3:04 right place at the right time I came to Silicon Valley speaking of the right place right after
3:10 college and Silicon Valley with a computer science
3:15 degree was the place to be and manage over the course of my career I again was
3:23 just fortunate to work for some of the you know great Innovative
3:28 companies my first job was Atari Atari was a company that owned coin operated
3:35 video games that they they had an aspiration to bring them to homes and
3:41 started video games in the home they had an aspiration to compete with Apple
3:46 and developed a personal computer and became
3:52 two and a half billion dollar company in three years amazing amazing growth
3:57 my next job was digital research which was a company that preceded Microsoft as the
4:05 leader in operating systems for personal computers and back when personal
4:11 computers were 8-bit Microsoft developed a new one that was 16-bit and be in the rest is history
4:19 um Oracle you know oracle one of the first companies to get into relational databases you know back then databases
4:26 were hierarchical Oracle pioneered relational databases and and that was an
4:32 amazing amazing advantage and and and tenure
4:38 um tgv a company that pioneered TCP protocols which sounds like a very dry
4:45 term but it became the basis of the internet the internet runs on tcpip
4:50 e a second and last job was a company called One Touch systems which was into
4:57 high bandwidth high volume conferencing you know we all take for Advantage what
5:02 we're doing here to together uh prior to OneTouch systems and other high
5:10 bandwidth conferencing companies you could only have a teleconference and you could only have a teleconference with
5:16 about eight or nine people and so that was you know sort of a huge development
5:22 opening it up to literally thousands of people then finally PeopleSoft where I
5:27 was CEO so that's sort of a step-by-step through my career
5:34 Craig I do see a pattern emerging here first of its kind like you know almost
5:39 one of the first graduates of computer science from Rochester the first gaming company trying to bring
5:46 gaming into you know the broader homes the iconic company like Microsoft
5:53 uh pioneering company in you know tcpip the word first of its kind and
6:00 pioneering comes to my mind for each of those you know you have participated in so it's not just the right place at the
6:06 right time it's also the choice you made that's a little bit of a risk taking where I see right there so in those
6:13 earlier days what was your mindset it might be driving your passion for technology because the opportunity met
6:20 the person who was ready for it yeah my passion for it was for technology I
6:27 mean it was this fascination with technology because for for me
6:33 technology was synonymous with change whatever the world was
6:38 a new technology could change the world overnight I mean not literally overnight
6:44 but almost overnight and you see it today
6:49 you know you see it today you think about some of the things you mentioned we talk about in our careers
6:56 you see it today I mean when was the last time you had to pay toll to a toll taker you know in San
7:02 Francisco Bay Area there are no toll takers you oh wait a minute you get the thing in your car no you don't even have
7:09 to get that anymore you just drive through there's Optical recognition of your license plate
7:15 um remember the first time you went to Home Depot and you checked yourself out with the scanner
7:20 Albertsons today national chain of of supermarkets announced they're going to
7:26 be getting rid of their checkout Clerks people are you know when you have a a cart full of groceries you're going to
7:32 check yourself out so to me it's been a lifelong interest in
7:38 technology and because technology represented change change changed the
7:43 world and you know the the financial success that went along
7:48 with it for the companies that I worked for was just sort of a characteristic of the
7:54 success what came with success for them but the the passion for me was seeing
8:01 how quickly technology could change the world indeed Visionary people get associated
8:06 with pioneering companies in one b or the other you spend a good portion of your early career at Oracle which had a winning
8:14 reputation and was growing at you know rocket space take us back to the time frame you know
8:19 how you thrive in that environment how is that environment and what were some of those calculated measured risks you
8:26 took to help grow in your career you know oracle
8:32 um was one of three companies that was pioneering a new type of
8:39 database as I mentioned you know databases back then were hierarchical
8:44 you know they were hierarchical or what sometimes called networked databases
8:51 and uh IBM had come up with a white paper
8:58 about how databases could be relational in nature and
9:04 Oracle and you remember Ingress and informix all three of those companies
9:10 got started and they were all tiny they were startups Oracle was almost a startup when I joined it it was 13
9:16 million dollars 13 million pretty small company and Larry Ellison was CEO and
9:23 you know he was a blue jeans black T-shirt cowboy boot uh guy with passion
9:31 for changing the world in terms of databases and
9:36 um I learned so much there I was there seven and a half years
9:43 um you know manage what I learned at Oracle was success in the technology industry
9:50 is not necessarily having the best product or it's not only having the best
9:55 product what I learned was that you have to have arguably the best product arguably in
10:03 other words it has you you have to be able to fend why it's the best product it may not be the absolute best product
10:10 but why did Oracle win because from the beginning it was the
10:15 most competitive company it was it was the epitome of hyper-competitive
10:23 Larry Ellison hated to lose hated to lose so everything about the
10:30 company was about winning externally in the marketplace against informix and
10:35 Ingress but also internally he he liked picking people that would
10:42 compete against each other internally his attitude was whoever won was we were going to be better off for it so he
10:50 he really brought in my Consciousness you know an awareness for how important
10:57 it was to be the be the most hyper competitive in the industry uh because
11:03 frankly at the time informix had the best uh I'm sorry Ingress at the time had the had the best uh technically the
11:11 best database but Oracle one create learning indeed Craig you could
11:17 have a great product Market fit you could scale your go to market engine really well but if you don't have the
11:23 chops to be competitive you know really beat them on the street you're not going to be a successful company I think you
11:29 definitely portrayed that here yeah you quickly made a name for yourself by
11:34 moving up the ranks and achieving you know high-level positions you know your whole career was seven years in Oracle
11:40 but you just moved up the rank so fast in learning these ropes you certainly needed a mentor or two to help guide you
11:48 or navigate through his corporate structures uh who were your mentors during this life or did they have a role to play at
11:54 all during this time you know I I think we've all had mentors
11:59 whether whether they were called mentors or not I think everybody's first mentors
12:06 were their school teachers you know some teacher along the way and
12:12 you know manage um I think you know this but not everybody knows this about me I have a
12:18 personal interest in education and I've sat on the board of universities
12:23 and I'm very supportive of universities and schools
12:28 um because as I Rose in my career
12:34 what I noticed was regardless of whether it was in the
12:40 world of business or public sector government of any kind
12:46 or a military what I noticed was everybody's
12:53 track was influenced by a teacher now today we call them mentors but it
13:00 starts really in High School grade school and I you know
13:06 along my school years I I had teachers that encouraged me the first one that
13:13 qualified as what we would call a mentor today was the chairman of the computer science department at State University
13:20 of New York the chairman of that department and he was the one that
13:26 established a computer science major for the State University before
13:32 99 of the universities in the country he was a great mentor he took an interest
13:38 he he advised me
13:43 uh on everything from the type of major I should get computer science
13:50 but also math I have a computer science and math degree courtesy of his guidance
13:58 he used to advise me on my appearance what I should dress like
14:04 based on what I was going to um my behavior how to how to communicate in
14:14 a way that is a business like I remember even my senior year he sat me
14:21 down and he said now listen if you're going to be at a in a cocktail party what drink are you going to order and
14:27 I'm thinking what Matt what difference does it matter what difference does it make and he would he would say no you
14:33 should order this kind of drink um he was my first I guess official official mentor and since that time
14:42 and I'm sure it's the same with you manage and everybody listening you know
14:47 we've had these series of mentors and you know sometimes they're
14:53 senior to us there are bosses or they're in Senior Management sometimes they're
14:59 just colleagues that have more experience than we do and and I've and I've had
15:05 you know many many of those and to this day still stay in touch with with a lot
15:10 of them totally makes sense you got me go down a little bit on my memory lane
15:17 too you're 100 right that every almost every teacher you had had a role in your
15:24 career shaping right in arcade shipping and I do remember this phrase from one
15:29 of my teachers when I was to think that cost the least and does the most is to
15:34 smile so please smile it's it's so true you I mean your life
15:41 how many of these things that were stuck in your psyche became part of you
15:48 and they were planted there by somebody that just took an interest in you and they changed your life and I and I'm
15:57 so happy that you know I've been able to work with you and you've been a mentor to me and so many mentors and throughout
16:04 my life too right so it's great without dating ourselves too much you know how
16:10 has the workplace and Technology industry in general evolved since your
16:15 early days in how companies help mentor and grow people's careers you know all of us
16:20 found our mentors through different conversations and whatnot in the early days has things changed you know has
16:26 there been an evolution in the approach yeah I I think that um
16:34 you know certainly technology industry has grown a lot I think I think a lot of Industries have grown some are new
16:40 industries that didn't even exist when we were starting our careers um
16:46 but it but you know I think what hasn't changed is
16:53 sort of the core of what is a mentor you know what is
16:58 how did two people come come together is it a corporate program and and today
17:04 there's more and more companies formalizing Mentor programs they they know the value
17:12 of them they know the value of them to employees but they also know the value to the company and so they are founding
17:19 and establishing Mentor programs um
17:25 but for me I think whether it's a formal program or an informal Mentor I think it all comes
17:33 down to relationship you know a mentor is essentially somebody you have a relationship with that is synonymous to
17:39 me it's they're synonymous you have a relationship with some a professional relationship with somebody that you look
17:47 to for guidance and and they have taken an interest in you and
17:53 and I think that starts with an interaction you know some interaction uh
17:58 usually turning to somebody and asking a question asking their opinion uh asking
18:04 for guidance telling them you're not quite sure and and that person
18:12 is interested in helping you um why are they interested I mean this
18:17 is this this is a whole topic why do people become mentors I think it's because they see something in you they
18:24 they see that you're you're bright or you're very focused or you're very determined or you're very
18:30 eager um or you're very appreciative and I think another quality is sometimes
18:36 mentors seeing people something that reminds them of themselves and and so I
18:44 think whether you connect with your Mentor through a
18:50 corporate program and there are more and more of those or whether it's just one-on-one I think it it has to start
18:58 with the personal relationship um
19:04 that that would be my observation I mean otherwise you know it's just a seminar you know if
19:11 you you know corporations have come up with Mentor programs and they just have people
19:19 sort of talking well that's that's a that's a class you know that's an instructor that's a seminar that's not a
19:26 mentor relationship Mentor relationships are interactive and they're based on a relationship
19:32 I'm so glad you mentioned this because your contrasting a similar sort of you
19:37 know mentoring to a true mentorship and I think you nailed it it's all about that relationship you see a spark in
19:44 that person somebody you want to interact with both of you are going to benefit from it there's a relationship
19:49 that Buds and then eventually expands to something bigger right that's how you see the mentorship evolving you nailed
19:55 it I think I'm so glad you went into that because not everything can be super prescriptive we can help people out with
20:01 some prescriptions but eventually you're on your own to Charter your paths right
20:07 yeah I think uh you know talk about not dating ourselves there's a very old saying you can lead a horse to water but
20:13 you can't make a drink um these venues that companies provide are terrific opportunities but you still
20:21 have to respond to them you still have to take the initiative um I remember at Salesforce many years ago
20:28 I've been on that board a long time uh when Salesforce was first starting a mentorship program they asked me to come
20:36 in to a room and speak with uh I think five or six uh female Executives
20:44 that were coming together to start to be more proactive with gender diversity
20:52 and they asked me some I they asked me some questions that I responded but there was
20:59 no interaction they just kind of wrote down what I said um so I would consider that more
21:06 conveying content than a real Mentor program which I do think is interactive
21:13 and I and I think it goes on for for years maybe maybe the rest of your life
21:18 I want to ask you this I've been wanting to ask you this for the longest time you know when you eventually had the
21:23 opportunity to become the CEO of PeopleSoft at that time a Star Wars in the Erp space
21:29 you know get LED various executive management roles before but this was different you were succeeding Dave
21:37 default in the role a person you know whose shoes were you know to be filled
21:44 and how did you approach this what was your mindset at this point well
21:50 um PeopleSoft when I joined uh
21:56 was a company founded by Dave Duffield Dave Duffield in my mind is one of the Legends in the technology industry he
22:04 has a much lower profile public profile or public Persona than somebody like
22:10 Bill Gates or Steve Jobs or Larry Ellison but he had a
22:17 career the same level of magnitude this is a man that that founded four
22:24 for technology companies all four of which were multi-billion dollar
22:29 companies I mean who does that Dave Dave Duffield
22:35 um and Dave Duffield was an amazing leader I I used to jokingly refer to
22:41 Dave as a wolf in Labrador clothing
22:46 um uh like a Labrador Retriever um because his appearance was
22:54 friendly ingratiating lovable huggable
23:01 but he was no less intense inside than Larry Ellison was
23:07 he was no less competitive but he just had a different Persona I I took over
23:12 the company after Dave founded it it was a turn turnaround you know it it had grown grown grown grown grown and then
23:20 it had flattened and then Revenue was starting to go down and it wasn't profitable anymore so I went in as CEO
23:27 and I had two guiding principles that people
23:32 saw one was retain
23:38 the strengths that had made the company successful retain those and for PeopleSoft it was customer support they
23:45 had the highest customer satisfaction ratings of any tech company their customers loved them and I was
23:52 determined not to lose that and the second was Employee culture employees
23:57 loved working there they had a very low turnover attrition rate and so I my I
24:03 was determined to retain that um but the second
24:09 sort of Guiding Light for me was to face reality
24:15 and the reality was why are we declining why are we losing Revenue why are we
24:20 losing money and I had this concept at the time which I think I've mentioned to
24:26 you before the knowledge called creative conflict I said to people from the first
24:31 day I started I am not uh I do not believe in Conflict avoidance or
24:38 reducing conflict I'm all about creative conflict having honest conversations if
24:44 we don't have the best products somebody tell us in a meeting we don't have the best products we can't do anything about
24:50 weaknesses until we have the courage to put them out on a table and if it hurts
24:57 people's feelings or people get upset about it that is not as bad as not
25:02 facing reality so that that was what I I did with people's side it was a great it was a phenomenal company in terms of its
25:09 initial growth it had reached a plateau I came in I had all the benefits that
25:15 Dave Duffield had in at its core instilled uh in
25:20 PeopleSoft and then we took it to the next level and developed the first HTML Erp system again getting back to my
25:27 earlier point that you you mentioned being the first we developed the first
25:33 HTML Erp system and then we took off again
25:39 it's amazing to hear this um first I got a new phrase I can use now
25:44 in the vocabulary wolf in a labrador clothing I never heard that before so
25:50 that's a new one and I couldn't agree with you more on the creative conflict thing I have a personal phrase I use
25:56 call a thing a thing in terms of you know having conversations where sometimes it's difficult to you know put
26:03 the thing out in the middle but you have to and uh I got to ask you this question
26:08 when you talk or think about PeopleSoft there was a difficult situation once
26:13 when Oracle wanted to acquire the company and I'm sure it was a very difficult time with lots of you know
26:18 options to consider and personally did you turn to anyone a mentor or a helping hand during this
26:26 time frame for advice you know I I didn't um
26:31 I didn't because I I mean I would have if I if I
26:37 knew of anybody that had been through what we were going through but what we were going through was pretty
26:43 unprecedented it was the longest hostile Takeover in American Business
26:48 history uh it was it was sort of unprecedented what do I
26:55 mean by that Oracle made a unsolicited offer for
27:01 PeopleSoft that was at a negative premium
27:08 a negative premium when when you're going to acquire a company
27:13 you offer them a premium you offer them more than their stock is trading for
27:19 our stock was trading for 18 Oracle offered in a hostile uh takeover an
27:25 unsolicited offer they offered 15 a share it was a little counter-intuitive
27:32 um that had never been done before they announced in the beginning that they reasonably were offering so little is
27:39 that they intended to buy the products and and shut them down which caused all kinds of doubt about the the viability
27:46 of the products long term so these were all things that had never happened in business uh there have been plenty of
27:52 case studies that Harvard and the Delaware court system that about this case because it was so
27:59 unique at the time and uh so so no I I didn't have
28:04 I didn't have necessarily a mentor I turned to um there were plenty of advisors you know
28:11 you have an army of attorneys you have an army of what are called crisis
28:17 management firms that you work with every day uh you're on TV all the time
28:24 you're in the newspaper all the time but I didn't have a mentor because there was
28:29 no one that had gone through something similar I would have I would have called them
28:35 makes sense another pioneering effort for you first of its guide
28:40 um now I'm going to flip things a bit you know we've been talking about your relationship with mentors during your
28:46 entire career um now as a c CEO then afterwards as a
28:52 member of the board for various companies I'm sure many people have
28:57 approached you for mentorship at this point did you start to Mentor others or
29:02 what was the approach you know based on your own experiences with mentorship
29:09 um I I'm not even sure I would call it mentoring it's just I've been trying to
29:14 help anybody that asked me for help all the way back to my you know early early career when I was a
29:22 first level vice president um
29:27 you know something once said to me I I wish I could remember her name
29:33 I was on my first business trip when I was very young I must have been in my late 20s there's certainly no no older
29:41 than 31 Maybe and I had made my first business trip
29:46 to Europe and I had landed in France and I was
29:52 nervous because at the time I
29:57 heard that the French didn't like Americans and I thought oh my gosh you know how
30:03 you know how am I going to deal with this I don't know what that's like and I met a woman an American woman who
30:12 was in business I she may have worked for IBM I I think and she had lived in France for I think
30:19 seven or eight years and so I immediately asked for advice I said Is it true that
30:26 you know Americans aren't really liked very much here and she said Craig
30:32 there is four words
30:37 that human beings can't resist even
30:43 people in France whether it's a taxi driver whether it's a customer whether
30:48 it's a supplier so what are those four words she said will you help me
30:56 she said those words virtually universally trigger a response
31:03 in people to help you and so for me as a mentor I you know when somebody it's hard to resist when
31:10 somebody comes to you and says will you help me I'm confused right I'm a little unsure
31:15 what I should do and from the time that I started to be approached by people asking for counsel
31:23 asking for whether they're viewing something properly if they're looking at
31:28 it correctly it triggered in me a desire to help and and I you know I've
31:36 been helping ever since and people have been helping me ever since so I think those are the that's
31:43 what people need to to realize and I think I think minosh it
31:49 the lesson in there is these Mentor relationships start
31:54 with the pers the men the mentee not the mentor you know if you want guidance go
32:02 to somebody that you respect that has more experience and asks for help you
32:08 know I think you have to take you know a mentor relationship the initiative is
32:14 taken by the person that wants the council take to take the initiative have a topic I'm confused I'm I'm responding
32:21 to a bid or my client is upset or uh we're developing this product and it's
32:27 behind schedule or whatever it is have a topic approach somebody that you
32:32 think can help and say will you help me and I and that starts a
32:38 what might be a lifelong relationship could I agree with you more a couple of
32:43 quick questions for you what's the most common question you got during these conversations and what is the hardest
32:49 question to answer during mentorship
32:54 um well you know it's hard to talk about the
33:01 hardest question because it's it's going to reveal uh something I'm
33:06 not myself sure about that's why it's a hardest question and [Music]
33:13 um let's give it a common I'm sorry let's go with the common question the most common question you
33:18 got I think um
33:25 I think the most common question is what advice do you what advice
33:32 do you give people starting their career uh
33:39 in general about mentoring about you know uh
33:46 high achievement success work life balance I mean this is a very tough
33:52 world we live in now it's it's a world that's been through um
33:58 past recessions followed by 10 years of growth 10 years of growth now
34:07 followed by a recession uh probably impacted by covid uh change of
34:16 of venue for people where they work a lot of people working from home
34:22 demographic shift demographic I mean
34:29 in for our career manage if you're in the tech industry you worked in Silicon Valley if you were in the financial
34:35 service industry you worked in New York City um if you didn't want a big career you
34:42 worked in little towns it's changed I mean today Austin Texas feels like
34:48 Silicon Valley uh Raleigh
34:54 um Nashville Salt Lake City people have for
35:00 Florida Florida is an enormous influx of people from New York city so you know
35:07 the demographics have changed work-life balance all these things so I think that
35:13 is a common question and it's also a hard question I think
35:18 um what I remind people is something
35:25 Sandy Robertson reminded me of Sandy Robertson's on the
35:30 board of Salesforce he's the lead director he has had an amazing career
35:36 he founded three of the most successful companies in the financial service
35:42 industry Montgomery Securities you'll remember them he founded that Robertson Stevens Investment Bank took most of the
35:50 tech companies of scale public he bounded that and Francisco Partners which is a private Equity Firm and I
35:57 remember talking to Sandy and he he I said Sandy and what a successful career
36:03 you've had what single thing do you attribute it to and he said the old saying the harder I worked the luckier I
36:09 got so I think in the end I think people it starts with this drive and this
36:18 uh determination and hard work you know
36:23 manage the first billionaire talk about work-life balance oh work-life balance
36:30 everybody's concerned about work-life balance everybody wants to have a full life great
36:35 but when I was at Oracle many many years ago I met my first billionaire
36:42 now billionaire there weren't very many billionaires back then so this was he totally on you know unique opportunity
36:49 for me I wasn't going to drive the meeting I was just going along matter of fact a mentor speaking of that friend of
36:55 mine so would you like to come along to a customer meeting meeting with a person the head of this company it's a
37:00 billionaire great so I didn't say I didn't say anything the entire meeting and at the
37:07 end of the meeting the conversation shifted to a revelation
37:13 that the my colleague had he used the word revelation so in a very
37:21 small in a very small voice coming from somebody that was maybe 31 or 32 years
37:26 old me I said could I ask you what your first
37:33 revelation was in business and this fellow turned to me and without
37:39 missing a Beat said you can only do two things well in
37:46 life and if one of them is going to be your family
37:52 and one of them is going to be your career don't expect to be a scratch golfer
37:58 or a 5.0 tennis player or have a myriad of hobbies
38:05 and so for people that say to me I want to have a you know
38:11 tremendous career then I would say you've you know pick one more thing because if you're going to have a
38:17 tremendous career uh you're gonna have to pick one more thing and most people will pick their family now I'm not I'm not saying
38:23 everybody has to make a career their top priority but when if you talk about guidance and the most common questions I
38:29 I get I often get questions about how do I what do I need to do to be super
38:35 successful in business or in a career I relate the story that you can only do
38:41 two things well that's really Sage advice you can do multiple things well right you know pick
38:46 the two things and really be good at those two I totally get that um I've got to ask you this one final
38:53 question you know part of the audience we're trying to reach with this podcast is you know young
38:58 aspiring you know new technologist early in their careers you know you had multiple roles including you know CEO
39:06 positions board positions and various companies and as you wrap up here what advice would you give to young people
39:11 today pursuing a career in Tech uh to be successful in Tech yeah yeah
39:20 um you know I've I don't I don't commonly say this uh so
39:28 and I'm not sure I've said this for many several years
39:33 um there is a tendency in the technology industry
39:39 to stay on a linear path if you start in telesales you then
39:45 become a field sales person and then you go and become a branch manager Branch
39:51 sales manager and then a regional sales manager a national sales manager the cro and you take that path and the same
39:58 thing if you're in finance you know you start in the you know accounts payable area and you know you
40:06 wake you make your way up I think that
40:15 broad experience is one of the most
40:20 valuable things you could bring to your career because if you're going to run a company someday or if you're going to run multiple divisions of a company
40:27 someday the more things that you have done the more unique you are and the
40:33 better prepared you are um I mean I I had this computer science degree I
40:40 became a systems engineer but then I've flipped over to become a sales
40:46 representative and a sales manager and then at Oracle I was in charge of sales Administration and and
40:53 um and infrastructure and legal and um you know the the breadth of your
41:01 experience I think is something that people
41:07 um don't really put as much thought into and I thought of weight
41:15 into there's the C the CFO of nutanix a
41:20 company that I'm on the board of public company very successful the CFO used to be a chro
41:26 and prior to that she was in development I mean what that seems like but that's
41:34 part of her magic she she knows a lot about the breadth of how to run a
41:41 company so I think that I think breath is the the thing that I would say to somebody uh don't be quite so determined
41:48 to stay on the linear path breath can give you a competitive advantage
41:54 great advice to end the show Craig it has been an absolute pressure to host
42:00 you in the be bold podcast thank you thank you for joining us thank you manage