Ex-Oracle Exec Plots His 'Revenge,' 3 Years Later
And he's competing directly with his old employer, Oracle.
Or so he hopes, reports the New York Times, which described it today as "a decent revenge story, or at least a tech giant face-off."
A spokesperson for Phillips, however, tells us that the CEO has nothing but respect for Ellison, whom he regards as a worthy competitor. (In fact he helped Oracle with an IP case against SAP after he left Oracle.)
“Oracle is big, but it’s focused on trying to put together a system of hardware, and it is confusing as a software company ... on applications, they are easier to beat than SAP,” Phillips told the Times' Quentin Hardy.
Naturally, he's trying to beat SAP, too.
Infor, a private company, hit nearly $3 billion in revenues in 2012 – about $2.8 billion to be precise – which makes it about it big as Salesforce.com. That stat clearly surprised Marc Benioff when the two were talking on stage at a tech conference last year.
As of November, Infor had an estimated valuation of $16.1 billion. Like Oracle and SAP, its bread-and-butter is
He's building Infor much like he helped Ellison build Oracle: though acquisitions, two or more a year.
Phillips was once Ellison's right-hand man as co-president at Oracle.
He left that job in 2010 in the aftermath of a personal scandal. His former mistress outed the affair by plastering their faces together on billboards in New York, San Francisco and Atlanta. Phillips resigned from his board position at Morgan Stanley (he reportedly met the woman at Morgan Stanley) and out at Oracle. (He and his wife stayed together, though.)*
He was replaced by Ellison's buddy, another exec embroiled in a sex-scandal, former HP CEO Mark Hurd.
Ellison probably wasn't all that concerned about Phillips' private life but there was growing public tension between the two. Phillips had announced that Oracle planned to double the $35 billion it had spent on acquisitions and Oracle immediately withdrew and denied those plans.
He plans to keep acquiring niche areas, adding a new industry every 18 months, until he's grown enough to become Oracle and SAP's biggest threat, Hardy reports.
* Correction: This story originally stated, incorrectly, that Phillips was divorced. Apologies.
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