Sun's Canepa Goes Extreme

The Gordon Stitt era ends as Mark Canepa is named Extreme Networks' CEO

August 31, 2006

2 Min Read
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With Extreme Networks Inc. (Nasdaq: EXTR) going through a difficult period, maybe it's appropriate that the company picked a CEO accustomed to adversity.

Mark Canepa, formerly the VP in charge of the troubled networked storage division at Sun Microsystems Inc. (Nasdaq: SUNW), was named Extreme's CEO today. He replaces Gordon Stitt, who becomes chairman of Extreme's board in a transition announced in May. (See Extreme Names CEO and Stitt Gets Less Extreme.)

Extreme's earnings have managed to disappoint analysts for three quarters running -- although Stitt notes that his decision to retire as CEO came some time ago and isn't related to Extreme's situation, good or bad. (See Extreme Scores Hat Trick.)

Canepa, meanwhile, is a 10-year veteran of Sun who took over that company's storage efforts in 2001. He ended up leaving last May -- voluntarily, according to the official release -- as the company began what would become a large-scale restructuring under new CEO Jonathan Schwartz. (See Sun Takes Action Amidst Concerns and Schwartz Shakes Up Sun.)

Sun has a less than stellar reputation in storage, and its $6.1 billion acquisition of StorageTek -- arguably the biggest event in Canepa's tenure -- didn't do much to change that. (See Sun to Acquire StorageTek for $4.1B and What Sun Could Have Bought Instead.)Whether that's Canepa's fault is open to debate. It's analogous to a baseball manager getting fired when a team is losing; maybe the team just wasn't that good in the first place.

"Certainly a lot of fingers were pointed toward Mark, but storage at Sun has never been a strategic initiative," says Greg Schulz, an analyst with The StorageIO Group . "From a strategic standpoint it's always been a secondary effort at best, and I'd say that has more to do with the culture and the DNA at Sun."

In fact, Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ) even put together a special Website just to pick apart Sun's storage history and the StorageTek deal. (Apparently, Hallmark didn't have a greeting card to suit the occasion.) The site notes that Sun talked about "redefining storage" in 1998, in 2000, and again in 2003. Cheeky.

StorageTek, meanwhile, finally turned in some strong numbers, boosting Sun's June quarter. (See Sun's Storage Rebounds.)

Canepa wasn't available for comment, and Extreme isn't yet commenting on the reasons for choosing him.Extreme's stock blipped upwards today, climbing $0.11 (3.1%) to $3.69 by early afternoon.

Craig Matsumoto, Senior Editor, Light Reading

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