There they go again.
Lawrence Ellison of Oracle, right, and Mark Hurd, formerly of H.P., at a 2008 conference. Mr. Hurd now works at Oracle.
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The Hewlett-Packard board is back to doing what it does best: shooting itself in the foot. By filing an embarrassing lawsuit against the company’s former chief executive, Mark V. Hurd, this week — a suit that unwittingly highlights the mistakes it made in the way it let Mr. Hurd go — the H.P. board can now lay claim, officially, to the title of the Most Inept Board in America. It’s going to take a yeoman effort to dethrone these guys.
Before moving on to today’s installment, let’s take a look at who a few of these directors are. The best-known director is the most recent addition to the board: Marc L. Andreesen, who more or less invented the browser while still in college, and has since become one of Silicon Valley’s biggest stars. He joined in 2009, a few years after H.P. bought Mr. Andreesen’s latest company for $1.6 billion.
Rajiv L. Gupta, who serves on three boards, spent a decade as the chief executive of Rohm & Haas. John H. Hammergren is the chairman and C.E.O. of McKesson; he’s also on three boards. Robert L. Ryan is the former chief financial officer of Medtronics. He sits on four boards. You’d think that these guys would know how to negotiate an airtight exit deal with a departing C.E.O. Apparently not.
Anyway, when last we left The Most Inept Board in America, it had booted Mr. Hurd for supposedly fudging his expense reports to hide the fact that he was using a former soft-core porn actress turned reality-TV contestant as a greeter at big H.P. customer events. (At least that is what I infer; H.P.’s public statements about the Hurd firing — or was it a forced resignation? — are not exactly models of transparency.)
This happened on Aug. 6. Because the H.P. board didn’t have the nerve to fire Mr. Hurd for cause, it wound up handing him a monster severance package. Much of it came in the form of stock options granted to Mr. Hurd in previous years. But $12.2 million was cash — money clearly meant as a kind of genteel, legal bribe to prevent Mr. Hurd from joining a direct competitor.
Mr. Hurd got his $12.2 million 30 days after leaving H.P. On Sept. 6 — which is to say, the 31st day — Oracle announced that Mr. Hurd was joining Oracle as co-president, reporting to its founder and chief executive, Lawrence J. Ellison, well known in Silicon Valley as a corporate mischief-maker.
Mr. Ellison was already on record, in an e-mail to The New York Times, describing the Hurd firing as “the worst personnel decision since the idiots on the Apple board fired Steve Jobs many years ago.” You could practically see him chortling in the press release announcing Mr. Hurd’s new job. “Mark did a brilliant job at H.P. and I expect he’ll do even better at Oracle,” Mr. Ellison was quoted as saying.
Seventeen hours later, H.P. filed its lawsuit, claiming that Mr. Hurd’s decision to join Oracle “has put H.P.’s most valuable trade secrets and confidential information in peril.” In effect, the company argued that Mr. Hurd’s brain was so stuffed with inside information about H.P. that everything he did at Oracle would unfairly take advantage of that knowledge.
Which may even be true. Perhaps the directors should have thought of that when they were negotiating his departure.
Let us acknowledge, before going any further, that Mr. Hurd does not appear to be a candidate for sainthood in this matter. This whole dustup began when Mr. Hurd was accused of sexual harassment by Jodie Fisher, the greeter in question. Although Mr. Hurd quickly paid to make the accusation go away — and although the two have denied having sex — it sure looks like something fishy was going on. You don’t keep someone off your expense account without a reason.
Indeed, three board experts I spoke to all felt strongly that the directors did the right thing in forcing Mr. Hurd to resign, even if they didn’t do it particularly well. Nell Minow, the co-founder of the Corporate Library, went so far as to say that, under the law, H.P. had no choice but to jettison Mr. Hurd.
Companies that do business with the government, she said, are legally required to apply their ethics policy even-handedly. If it’s a firing offense when a midlevel employee fudges an expense report, then it has to be a firing offense for the chief executive as well. “They had no other option,” she said.
Further, Mr. Hurd’s decision to join Oracle is not exactly a case study in ethical corporate behavior. Although Oracle and H.P. have long been business partners, the two companies are also poised to increasingly compete in the hardware market. Early this year, Oracle completed its purchase of Sun Microsystems, which puts it in head-to-head competition with H.P. (and I.B.M.) in the high-end server market.
Thus, the central contention in the H.P. lawsuit — that Mr. Hurd will inevitably use his inside knowledge of H.P.’s hardware business to help his new employer — strikes me as quite plausible. How can he not? He’s spent the last five years eating, drinking and sleeping H.P. (Well, except when he was eating and drinking with Ms. Fisher.) H.P. is in his bones.
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