- C. Edward McVaney
Infobox_Celebrity
image_size = 150px
name = C. Edward McVaney
| birth_date = birth date and age|1940|9|29
birth_place =Omaha ,Nebraska , USA
death_date =
death_place =
occupation = philanthropist, investor and formerChief executive officer
salary =
networth = profit $1.25 billion USDForbes (1998) 13th in Forbes Tech 100 (just after Steve Jobs)
website = [http://www.jdedwards.com] a wholly-owned subsidiary ofOracle Corporation C. Edward McVaney (born
December 29 ,1940 ) was the co-founder and formerCEO of theJ.D. Edwards Corporation, a pioneeringEnterprise Resource Planning company purchased byPeopleSoft in 2002. PeopleSoft, in turn was purchased byOracle Corporation in January 2005.Early life
McVaney was born in Omaha, Nebraska, December 29, 1940. As his father was off to war as a
World War II dentist , according to a 2002 interview, McVaney had very little memory of him until he came home at the end of the War. ." [ [http://www.cwhonors.org/archives/histories/McVaney.pdf 2002 Transcript of an Computerworld Honors Program oral history video interview with Ed McVaney by Daniel S. Morrow at his home, the McVaney Ranch, in Colorado, 2002 ] ] His father had graduated from Creighton University and while he served largely behind lines in the Army Air Corps, he came home from Europe with indications ofpost-traumatic stress syndrome and was haunted by nightmares and terrified by loud noises for many years after his return. McVaney recalls the day his father showed up saying that of him that he appeared to be "the biggest, tallest man in the whole world. I was just a little squirt". ." [ [http://www.cwhonors.org/archives/histories/McVaney.pdf 2002 Transcript of an Computerworld Honors Program oral history video interview with Ed McVaney by Daniel S. Morrow at his home, the McVaney Ranch, in Colorado, 2002 ] ] McVaney's siblings included four brothers. His mother Mary McVaney, was a housewife and as a child, the family lived, as he describes it, "in a very frugal, frugal way" ." [ [http://www.cwhonors.org/archives/histories/McVaney.pdf 2002 Transcript of an Computerworld Honors Program oral history video interview with Ed McVaney by Daniel S. Morrow at his home, the McVaney Ranch, in Colorado, 2002 ] ] in their home on 38th Street in Omaha, Nebraska.Education
Because of
dyslexia McVaney had difficulties in school and was a very poor student. When he was in fourth grade and took an eye test, he could barely see the chart. Since his father was a graduate of Kearny College and a dentist, it was expected that he would attend college himself. Accordingly, he attended aJesuit elementary prep school, where, because of his dyslexia, he soon found himself thirtieth out of thirty-six students. Even in high school, he could barely read and struggled just to keep up because of his dyslexia. While reading was an issue, McVaney's cognitive skills were not at all impaired. In fact, by his sophomore year in high school he found out that in Geometry, he was the top student in his school--the whole school--and in his senior year he was the top student in Physics. While reading would remain an issue because of his dyslexia, it was clear that he was a gifted student in an all college-prep high school. Graduating from high school, Creighton Prep School in 1959, McVaney went to Iowa State Teacher's College on a football scholarship. He was on the dean’s list and graduated with honors in 1964 with a BS in mechanical engineering. In his senior year in engineering school, he took two courses in computers; one in operations research, and another in advanced dynamics, some kind of mathematics class, and, in his own words, "absolutely freaked out on computers," explaining that "that was the end of my engineering career and the beginning of my computer career," as there was no such thing as a Computer Science program at that time in Omaha. Discovered making "free calls" with little wire device to his girl friend, Carole, in Lincoln, Nebraska, McVaney lost his football scholarship and left Iowa State Teacher’s College. He returned to Creighton Prep School for a semester-and-a-half, and then attended theUniversity of Nebraska . McVaney married Carole in 1963For post-graduate training, McVaney attended
Rutgers University because its tuition was only about $100 a semester and, at that time, made no distinction between out-of-state and in-state tuition. McVaney and his wife lived inCedar Grove, New Jersey . He commuted to Rutgers which was located inNewark, New Jersey . Upon his graduation from Rutgers, McVaney was hired byWestern Electric as an operations research engineer.Career
As an engineer at Western Electric in mid-1964, McVaney worked in applied mathematics schemes theory which got him involved further with both computers and operations research using mathematical modeling in the mid-1960s. Because the computer systems of the day were so primitive and the data was incomplete, it was extremely difficult to get reliable information because, in McVaney's words, "the numbers weren’t credible." McVaney explains of that era, "We went through a whole twenty-five year period of time building strong powerful computer systems with integrity so that then twenty-five years later, when you did the fancy mathematics and the operations research and so on, it worked fine." While working at Western Electric, McVaney learned
machine language programming. While work at Western Electric was both challenging and rewarding intellectually and McVaney making what he considered good pay, $9,200 a year, when he was offered $14,000 a year to go to work in the Wall Street financial district for Peat Marwick Mitchell (nowKPMG ) in 1966, he snapped up the opportunity. McVaney found that as a frugal midwestern-bred young man, he could easily live on $3.00 a day when placed on a $9.00 a day expense account. He was in a self-described good situation.McVaney was transferred by Peat Marwick from New York City to
Denver, Colorado in1968. He continued with Marwick until 1970 when he took a position with Alexander Grant, nowGrant Thornton LLP .McVaney meets the men with whom he would form JD Edwards
While at Grant Thornton, McVaney met Jack Thompson who was working on an
IBM 1130 in Billings, Montana, and he was making $630 a month. Thompson was lured to Grant Thorton for $750 a month which brought him from Billings to Denver. McVaney had worked closely with Thompson going back to the time they had spent as consultants at the Great Western Life Insurance Company. At that time McVaney also met Dan Gregory, a college MBA student fromDenver University . McVaney hired him out of the MBA program at Denver University. McVaney describes that time as a period in which he was developing his personal concept of integrity from a "high school level" to a much more mature business-related notion of absolute reliability. At the same time he was coming to the realization that, in his words, "the culture of a public accounting firm is the antithesis of developing software. The idea of spending time on something that you’re not getting paid for - software development," indicating that accounting clients at that time just did not understand what was required for software development at that time. After what McVaney described as a consulting "failure" at a client, Haviland Whitcon Company, inSan Jose, California , McVaney came to the conclusion that he had to start his own firm to implement his own approach to accounting business software development. McVaney had been discussing starting his own firm with both his wife as well as Thompson and Gregory. Now it was time to make the move, telling her, "I think it’s time for me to start my own company. Look, I don’t really fit in here. The culture isn’t right. I want to get done some things that can’t be done as context. I’d like to start my own company." Soon he would have his chance.JDEdwards is born
In 1977, unsatisfied with conventional approaches to business and accounting software development and accounting software services, McVaney started J.D. Edwards by selling co-workers, Dan Gregory and Jack Thompson on his concept of a radically different approach to accounting software development that represented for all of them a significant cultural shift from typical sales promises to total commitment to customer goals based on an integrity-based approach to customer requirements. After discarding the name, Jack Daniels & Co., the group decided that J.D. Edwards sounded better. In order to get an $8,000 loan, McVaney took a salary cut from $44,000 to $36,000 and in order to live on that salary, all optional family expenses such as piano lessons, skiing and swimming lessons were pared.
Initial clients
Start-up clients included McCoy Sales in Denver, Colorado, a then $4-million wholesale distribution company and Cincinnati Milacron Company, a makers of machine tools. McVaney and his team wrote got a $75,000 contract to write software to develop a wholesale distribution system. The new company also got a $50,000 contract with the Colorado Highway Department to develop a governmental accounting, construction cost accounting system. McVaney's first international client was
Shell Oil Company inCameroon ,Africa . Co-founder Dan Gregory flew to Shell Oil, himself to install the company's first international, multi-national, multi-transcurrency client software system. JDEdwards' software was originally coded for the IBM System 36/38 and later upgraded to support the AS/400 and called JDEdwards World Software. In the late 90s, the software was ported toclient-server sysems and branded JDEdwards OneWorld. After JDEdwards was bought byPeopleSoft in 2002, the OneWorld product was rebranded PeopleSoft EnterpriseOne. After PeopleSoft was bought out byOracle Corporation in 2004, the product was rebranded JDEdwards EnterpriseOne as the PeopleSoft name itself was to be phased out. From the start, JDE, as it would come to be known, was created with mid-sized companies in mind.Enterprise Resource Planning or ERP software concept developed
With the vast majority of JDEdwards' customers in the medium sized area, clients did not have the luxury of gigantic accounting software implementations. There was a basic business need for all accounting to be tightly integrated. As McVaney would explain in 2002, integrated systems were created precisely because "you can’t go into a moderate-sized company and just put in a payroll. You have to put in a payroll and job cost, general ledger, inventory, fixed assets and the whole thing. SAP had the same advantage that J.D. Edwards had because we working on smaller companies, we were forced to see the whole broad picture." It was this requirement for both JDE clients in the USA and Europe as well as competitor SAP, whose typical clients were much smaller than the American fortune 500 firms. McVaney and his company, along with their European competitors developed what would be called ERP software in response to that business requirement.
McVaney takes JDEdwards public, retires, returns and retires again
McVaney felt that in order to compete effectively, his company needed additional capital and needed to go public. Bringing in Doug Massingill as CEO, JDE went public on
September 24 ,1997 , at an initial price of $23 per share and was traded onNASDAQ under the symbol JDEC. By 1998, JDE revenues was in excess of $934.0 million when McVaney retired. McVaney came out of retirement and fired Massingill returning in April 2000 as CEO because he felt that ongoing problems with quality control of the Company's client-server OneWorld product were severely cutting into the Company's credibility as an ERP provider. McVaney stood firm that the Company wait as long as necessary to release an absolutely ironclad-reliable upgraded ERP product. After a delaying the upgrade for one year and refusing all requests by marketing for what he felt was a premature release, in the fall of 2000, JDE released B7333 which was rebranded a "OneWorld Xe." Xe proved to be a most stable release to date and went a long way towards restoring customer confidence. McVaney had also been quietly encouraging customer feedback by supporting the totally independent JDE user group calledQuest International . Confident that the company was on the right track, McVaney retired again in January 2002, bringing in Robert Dutkowsky fromTeradyne as the new president and CEO. McVaney remained on the board, and Dutkowsky, who comes from Teradyne, added the title chairman and at Edwards' stockholders meeting in March 2002, joked how felt happy to return to streams not far from J.D. Edwards' Denver headquarters. Dutkowsky, however, did little to ensure the success of JDEdwards. Instead he simply focused on selling the company, eventually succeeding in doing so to PeopleSoft in mid-2003. This in turn spearheaded the acquisition spree of Oracle which continued unabated to the present.Family life
McVaney is married to his wife of over forty years, Carole McVaney whom he had met in high school and married in 1963. They have three children and as of 2002, seven grandchildren.
Involvement in philanthropy
In May 1998, McVaney donated more than $32 million to the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln to found theJ.D. Edwards Honors Program . This program is charged with educating the next generation of business professionals by combiningcomputer science education withbusiness management skills.Work in Iraq for the Coalition Provisional Authority in 2003
In 2003, against the objections of some family and most friends, McVaney volunteered his expertise in the difficult task of helping rebuild an Iraq shattered by the American invasion to take down the Saddam Hussein regime and the chaos and sectarian violence that resulted from the collapse of organized rule and the rise of armed militias. Living in the
Baghdad 'sGreen Zone and sleeping with hiskevlar helmet, McVaney worked with American and Iraqi counterparts.Notes and References
Notes
ee also
*
JDEdwards
*J.D. Edwards Honors Program External links
* http://www.cwhonors.org/archives/histories/McVaney.pdf Transcript of a Computerworld Honors Program oral history video interview with Ed McVaney by Daniel S. Morrow at his home, the McVaney Ranch, in Colorado, 2002.
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