| Steve Ballmer | |
| Born | March 24, 1956 Detroit, Michigan |
|---|---|
| Residence | United States |
| Occupation | CEO, Microsoft |
| Salary | 1 |
| Net worth | ▲ $15 billion USD (2007) |
| Height | 6 foot 5 inches |
| Spouse(s) | Connie Snyder |
| Children | 3 |
| Website Staff Bio at microsoft.com |
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Steve Anthony Ballmer (born March 24, 1956) is an American businessmanand has been the chief executive officer of Microsoft Corporation since January 2000.2 Ballmer is the second person after Roberto Goizueta to become a billionaire in U.S. dollars based on stock options received as an employee of a corporation in which he was neither a founder nor a relative of a founder. In Forbes 2008 World's Richest People ranking, Ballmer was ranked the 43rd richest person in the world, with an estimated wealth of $15 billion.
Steve Ballmer has been known to be very passionate in expressing his enthusiasm. When Microsoft celebrated its 25th anniversary in 2000, Ballmer popped out of the anniversary cake to surprise the audience. His performance on stage at an employees convention was caught on a widely-circulated video known as "Steve Ballmer going crazy." A few days later at a developers' conference, Ballmer repeatedly chanted "developers" in front of the gathering.
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Family
On October 4, 2007, Ballmer was awarded honorary citizenship of Lausen, Switzerland. His father had worked in Switzerland as a manager at Ford Motor Co in the late 1940s. In 1990 Ballmer married Connie Snyder, on Microsoft's PR team at the Waggener Group in the '80s. They have three children. Ballmer's maternal grandparents lived in Pinsk, Belarus.3
Career
| Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page. (January 2009) |
Pre-Microsoft & Life History
Steve Ballmer was born March 24, 1956, to a Swiss father and a Jewish-American mother whose family came from the Eastern European city of Pinsk (today in Belarus). He grew up in Farmington Hills, Michigan. In 1973, he graduated from Detroit Country Day School, a high school, and now sits on its board of directors. In 1977, he graduated from Harvard University 4 with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and economics. While in college, Ballmer managed the football team, worked on the Harvard Crimson newspaper as well as the Harvard Advocate, and lived down the hall from fellow sophomore Bill Gates. He then worked for two years as an assistant product manager at Procter & Gamble, where he shared an office with Jeffrey R. Immelt, who would later become CEO of General Electric.5 In 1980, he dropped out from the Stanford University Graduate School of Business.6
Microsoft career
Ballmer joined Microsoft on June 11, 1980.7, and became Microsoft's 24th employee, the first business manager hired by Gates.citation needed He was initially offered a salary of $50,000 as well as a percentage of ownership of the company. When Microsoft was incorporated in 1981, Ballmer owned 8 percent of the company. He has headed several divisions within Microsoft including "Operating Systems Development", "Operations", and "Sales and Support." In January 2000, he was officially named chief executive officer.2 As CEO Ballmer handled company finances, however Gates still retained control of the "technological vision." In 2003, Ballmer sold 8.3% of his shareholdings, leaving him with a 4% stake in the company.8 The same year, Ballmer replaced Microsoft's employee stock options program. In 2009, and for the first time ever, he made the opening keynote at CES, since Bill Gates left Microsoft
Public persona
Viral videos
Footage featuring Ballmer's flamboyant stage appearances at Microsoft events have been widely circulated on the Internet, becoming viral videos. The most famous of these is commonly titled "Steve Ballmer going crazy."9. This video features Ballmer sprinting and hopping around while verbally screeching, screaming and making other various high pitched noises as well as dramatic hand gestures on a stage for about 45 seconds after being introduced at a Microsoft employee convention. This video is also known in other names, such as Steve Ballmer Going Nuts and Ballsy (aka Steve Ballmer) on Crack. Another video, captured at a developers' conference, featuring Ballmer chanting the word "developers" was viewed by a million viewers on YouTube. 10 Another video, which became a "big hit on the web" and was featured on CNN11 shows Ballmer ducking behind a desk to evade eggs during a speech in Budapest, Hungary1213
On competition
Bill Gates
The Wall Street Journal has reported that there was tension surrounding the 2000 transition of authority from Bill Gates and Ballmer. Things became so bitter that, on one occasion, Gates stormed out of a meeting in a huff after a shouting match in which Mr. Ballmer jumped to the defense of several colleagues, according to an individual present at the time. After the exchange, Mr. Ballmer seemed "remorseful," the person said.
Once Gates leaves, "I'm not going to need him for anything. That's the principle," Mr. Ballmer said. "Use him, yes, need him, no."14
Free and open source software
He has referred to the free Linux operating system as a "[…] cancer that attaches itself in an intellectual property sense to everything it touches."15 Ballmer used the notion of "viral" licensing terms to express his concern that the GNU General Public License (GPL) license employed by such software requires that all derivative software be under the GPL or a compatible license.
Lucovsky/Google
In 2005, Mark Lucovsky alleged in a sworn statement to a Washington state court that Ballmer became highly enraged upon hearing that Lucovsky was about to leave Microsoft for Google, picked up his chair, and threw it across his office. Referring to Google CEO Eric Schmidt (who previously worked for competitors Sun and Novell), Ballmer allegedly said, "Fucking Eric Schmidt is a fucking pussy. I'm going to fucking bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again. I'm going to fucking kill Google," then resumed trying to persuade Lucovsky to stay at Microsoft.1617 Ballmer has described the incident as a "gross exaggeration of what actually took place."17
Sports
On March 6, 2008 Seattle's Mayor announced that a local ownership group involving Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer made a "game changing" commitment to invest $150 million in cash toward a $300 million renovation of Key Arena and are ready to purchase the Seattle SuperSonics in order to keep them in the City of Seattle. 18 Ballmer would join fellow Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen (owner of the Portland Trail Blazers) as an NBA owner.
Media portrayals
- Bad Boy Ballmer : The Man Who Rules Microsoft (2002), Fredric Alan Maxwell, ISBN 0-06-621014-3 (unauthorized biography)
- The 1999 docudrama Pirates of Silicon Valley features Ballmer as a major character; he is played by actor John DiMaggio.
- Michael Maccoby qualified him as a "productive obsessive" and the one keeping Microsoft's "show on the road" so Bill Gates could think about the big picture.19
- In the webcomic XKCD, the perfect level of intoxication resulting in super-human programming abilities is referred to as the "Ballmer Peak."20
Notes
- ^ Steve Ballmer's salary
- ^ a b "Steve Ballmer: Chief Executive Officer". Microsoft (March 1, 2005).
- ^ President of “Microsoft” visits his ancestors’ homeland – Pinsk
- ^ "Microsoft’s Ballmer Makes His Pitch", Harvard Business School Alumni Bulletin.
- ^ "First job: Assistant product manager for Duncan Hines' Moist & Easy cakes and brownies. His cubicle mate was Jeffrey Immelt, now CEO of General Electric."David Lieberman (2007-04-29). "CEO Forum: Microsoft's Ballmer having a 'great time'". USA Today.
- ^ "After two years, Ballmer headed for Stanford University's MBA program for a better grounding in business. When the fledgling Microsoft ran into problems in 1980, Gates persuaded his friend to drop out and give him a hand. "Jay Greene, Steve Hamm, Jim Kerstetter (2002-06-17). "Ballmer's Microsoft". BusinessWeek.
- ^ "Information for Students: Key Events In Microsoft History" (doc). Microsoft Visitor Center Student Information. Retrieved on October 1, 2005.
- ^ MSFT: Major Holders for MICROSOFT CP - Yahoo! Finance
- ^ ""Steve Ballmer going crazy"".
- ^ Ballmer Becomes lonevoice at microsoft's helm The Economic Times 30 Jun 2008
- ^ Video - Breaking News Videos from CNN.com
- ^ ""Tojással dobálták a Microsoft-vezért a Közgázon"" (in Hungarian).
- ^ ""Microsoft CEO's Egg Attack"".
- ^ Robert A. Guth (2008). "Gates-Ballmer Clash Shaped Microsoft's Coming Handover". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved on 2008-06-05.
- ^ John Battelle (September 2, 2005). "Ballmer Throws A Chair At "F*ing Google"". John Battelle's Searchblog. Retrieved on 2008-01-06.
- ^ a b "Microsoft CEO: 'I'm going to f---ing kill Google'", Sydney Morning Herald (September 3, 2005). Retrieved on 1 February 2007.
- ^ Mayor Nickels announces local effort to buy Sonics, renovate KeyArena
- ^ Maccoby, Michael. "Narcissistic Leaders: The Incredible Pros, the Inevitable Cons". Harvard Business Review (January-February 2000): pp. 76. "Bill Gates can think about the future from the stratosphere because Steve Ballmer, a tough obsessive president, keeps the show on the road.".
- ^ xkcd - A webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math, and language - By Randall Munroe
External links
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Steve Ballmer |
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Steve Ballmer |
- Corporate biography
- Forbes World's Richest People listing
- South China Morning Post audio interview
- fakesteveballmer blog
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