The Chip
Insider®’s Obituary for Bob Graham
September 10,
1998: From the front lines . . .
Our industry has lost one of its marketing
geniuses. Bob Graham has passed
away at the age of 69. Loved by those he mentored, hated by those who
crossed him, and feared by those who competed against him. Bob was
brilliant, too good, almost always right and, always controversial. He made
few mistakes in a field littered with the bones of lesser executives.
Customers often hated him because he would not listen to their wants. But
then, they would quietly admire him when solutions were delivered to their
needs. As a mentor, he turned my interest from studying the cold economics
of the industry to the warmth of marketing.
Steve Irving (the inventor of plasma
etching) had told me, “marketing is a plank job, you don’t want to go into
that.” It is. And if you imagine Bob as Luke Skywalker, in the movie
‘Return of the Jedi,’ walking the plank bound and blindfolded to be eaten by
a giant sand worm and then turning the advantage against all odds, you come
close to Bob Graham’s marketing ability. Bob Graham is the only man for
whom, when leaving a company, I would get calls from competitors wanting to
know where he was going so they could buy stock in the company.
At Fairchild, he pushed hard, against
stiff management opposition, to price parts according to grade. The
argument had been that they cost the same to make, so they should be priced
the same. But in the face of rising inventories, Bob won out. The excess
inventories were soon eliminated and Fairchild started a revenue rise that
eventually took it to the top of the semiconductor industry.
As one of the founders of Intel, he
figured how to harness the power of Moore’s law with the memories they had
just invented in the early seventies. He created the “Intel Delivers”
positioning statement that ultimately became a part of the company’s DNA.
He matched Intel’s design cycle to the system designer’s, introducing a new
generation of memories with every 4X increase in bits. Others fell behind,
following the letter of Moore’s law, by trying to get ahead by introducing
with every 2X increase.
Jim Morgan is famous for turning
around Applied Materials in the late
seventies. Bob is less known for his major contribution of shifting
Applied’s focus from shipping hardware to delivering solutions. Today this
is immortalized in the Applied’s positioning statement, ‘Total Solutions.’
He then went on to successfully lead the launch of a string of products that
put Applied on a trajectory to be where it is today.
Leaving Applied, Bob then rescued Novellus
by doing the unthinkable: shifting the focus from delivering solutions to
providing the best and most productive hardware. I recall my response to
this as being something along the lines of, “you’re going to do what?”
He implemented this approach by taking my equipment cost of ownership
models and turning them into a business tool. He then dragged the entire
chip industry kicking and screaming to the belief that productivity
mattered.
If Bob were alive, he would certainly tell you that he should not get all
the credit for these successes. For like Luke Skywalker, Bob knew how to
use ‘the force.’ The force of combining the people he worked with, with
that of customers he served. |