Although most of us see cloud computing as the inevitable future of enterprise computing, it's not easy for people and companies with decades of experience from a different era to make the shift. Pivotal has had a great deal of success helping companies adjust and embrace the cloud, and the key person behind that effort, CEO Paul Maritz,
announced this week that he's stepping down from that position to become chairman of the company. Rob Mee (pictured above), who was executive vice president of Pivotal Labs and is a co-founder of the company along with Maritz.
Any time a company changes CEOs there's a tendency to assume something was amiss, but in this case it seems like a rather orderly transition, with Pivotal smartly choosing to announce that it expects to do $100 million in bookings for Cloud Foundry this year alongside the news of Maritz's departure. Mee's tenure at the company also suggests that Pivotal's employees
are pretty familiar with his style.
But these are still interesting times for Pivotal and its "federation" partners, EMC and VMware. Joe Tucci, CEO of EMC and considered the godfather of the federation, is 67 and has vacillated on the prospect of retirement before, although earlier this year he said he's not thinking about the shuffleboard and early-bird special lifestyle just yet. Maritz, who was once CEO of VMware and an executive at EMC, had been seen as a likely successor but said this week that his "operational career is over."
And as
Adam Lashinsky of Fortune noted following the news of Mee's promotion, this might be an ideal time for EMC to bring VMware and Pivotal fully into the fold, consolidating the three-headed monster into one corporation. As we noted in this newsletter a few weeks ago, according to reports EMC has at least considered a "downstream merger," in which it would be acquired by VMware.
These will certainly be tricky waters for Mee to navigate. But there's still a huge amount of potential for Pivotal's services as the world shifts to the cloud, and if he can keep the company growing at this pace, the balance of power in the federation could shift.