Develop Your Own Growth Framework, Sparta CEO Martinson Tells NJTC Audience


Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com



Eileen Martinson CEO of Sparta Systems delivered the keynote at the NJTC CFO Awards Breakfast in June. | NJTC


Eileen Martinson — who was brought to Sparta Systems (Hamilton) in 2011 to lead the company from status quo to accelerated growth — told several hundred attendees at the New Jersey Tech Council (NJTC) CFO Awards Breakfast on June 12, 2013, to shake up their sleepy middle-market companies and grow.

She then provided the framework that had helped her implement strategies to deliver more than 20 percent top-line growth year over year at Sparta, a middle-market company in business for 18 years.

Speaking to the group who had gathered at the Forsgate Country Club in Monroe Township, Martinson called herself a “framework type of person,” explaining that hers will not work for everyone. “You have to come up with your own framework and adjust it according to your style and what you are trying to accomplish with your particular business,” she advised.

Growth should be a bit easier in this economy, Martinson indicated. “We are seeing some recovery in the housing market and the unemployment rate,” she said.

She pointed out that middle-market companies — those with annual revenue of between $25 million and $1 billion — fuel much of the country’s economic growth, generating $6 trillion in revenue each year and employing 20 million Americans. If middle-market companies concentrate on growth, the whole country will benefit, she said.

Companies start down the path toward growth by defining the customer value proposition, Martinson said. “I have some of my team here today, and they know I always say it’s all about the customer.”

The book Blueprint to a Billion by David Thomson has been particularly helpful to Martinson as she has sought to lead Sparta. In it, Thomson presents three types of value propositions. One describes companies that are leading a market, creating something entirely new. Within that segment are subcategories, one of which is the gap filler. “Where we are going with Sparta Systems is towards filling the gap around enterprise quality,” a new market, Martinson said.

The next step in growing is to determine the total addressable market for your company. Martinson said making this assessment is not easy when you are filling a gap in a new market. You have to know the total market opportunity, which includes learning the market size and who the competition is. You must ask if there is enough growth available for the size company you want to be, she said.

While many businesses can obtain market size information from analyst companies, in Sparta’s case there really isn’t any data on the enterprise-quality market “because we are creating it,” Martinson said. “What Sparta had to do … is look at the companies it believed it should serve, look at the number of employees in these companies as well as Sparta’s historical contracts, and then determine the revenue opportunity,” she said.

Martinson said she had done her due diligence before moving to Sparta. The company was “a little sleepy,” and she had thought she could do great things with it. “I started out at 8:30 a.m. [on] day one in a webcast to everyone, saying, ‘We are going to double in size during the next couple of years.’

“You have to go out there and set the bar high,” she noted, because if you set the bar at 10 percent growth, you’ll probably struggle to achieve 7 percent.

The next step is to understand your internal capabilities, including those of your management staff. “We had a great management team in 2011, but we had  to make some really hard decisions … because sometimes you have really good people but … they don’t fit the vision of where you are trying to take the business …” It takes a lot of time to find the right people and close the deal with them, but if you don’t get the right team in place, you won’t move ahead, Martinson said.

Alternatively, your employees may be the right people who are missing skills, so you have to help them obtain them. “For example, we are running a first-line leadership program this summer for our first-line managers. I believe if you want to scale a company, first-line managers are critical,” noted Martinson.

Sparta surveys customers, the company’s most critical resource, to find out how it is doing. “If we get a detractor, we call them immediately, find out what the issue is and solve it immediately,” Martinson noted. The company studies trends to determine whether it needs to adjust its customer strategy.

It’s important to understand your employees, Martinson pointed out. “We are in a competitive job market. We work really hard to recruit the right people into our company. It’s not easy. We have a tough standard for the kind of people we want.” Sparta surveys its employees to determine how the company relates to them. It also runs employee outside enrichment programs, such as female managers’ networking opportunities and charity golf events.

Growth company CEOs have to ensure their product portfolio aligns with the customer value proposition and the firm’s growth strategy, Martinson said. Don’t build things because they are cool, she advised; make sure customers will actually pay you for them. “This does require continuous innovation,” she said, noting that “if we don’t continue to innovate and change and add more value for our customers, we are not going to continue to grow.”

Don’t be afraid to partner for innovation, Martinson advised. “We had a little bit of the ‘invented here’ syndrome going on. Unless we invented it at Sparta, it wasn’t good enough,” she said. Now the company partners with others in the market.

Martinson said she believes in cash flow, and Sparta is funding its growth out of operations. “We’ve actually reduced our EBITA [earnings before interest, taxes and amortization] to be able to support our go-to market, putting more salespeople out there and investing in the product. I told my investors, ‘We are going to be real slackers this year … we are only going to have about 26 percent EBITA,’ ” she said, eliciting a chuckle from the audience.

Another action key to growth is recognizing critical employees who deliver value to your customers. They may be individual contributors tending to customers in services and support, or employees delivering innovation at an R&D organization. “Find those people and take really good care of them,” Martinson advised, because other companies want them.

You must also ensure your compensation plan is aligned with the growth plan, she noted. Sparta ties a bonus program to profitability and revenue targets, but it also has an accelerator tied to licensed revenue growth, a leading indicator for the firm. Everyone in the company is eligible. Everyone’s bonus is also tied to customer satisfaction, Martinson added.

Martinson advised that companies break down the overall growth plan into quarters so the management team can “wrap their arms around it.” She holds yearly strategy and twice-monthly operations meetings that review critical accounts, product plans and other operational imperatives. “This is how you stay on target,” she said. “It’s really important.”

When you are growing quickly, you are also hiring and adding people quickly, and “there may be some people you need to pull out every year,” noted Martinson. “Those are hard decisions, but that is a good way to protect … your profits. If you don’t take care of this year by year, you may wake up one day and find you have to lay off a lot of people because your business is stalled,” she explained.

Finally, it’s all about execution, Martinson pointed out. “We use a scorecard approach to run the business. Having worked in public companies, you tend to get focused on quarters. But when you use the balanced scorecard approach, you look at all the aspects of your business that help you drive those numbers,” she said.


Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and is republished here with her permission.


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Saturday Highlights 7/27/2013: Announcement of Publicis/Omnicom deal expected tomorrow (reports)



Publicis Said to Be in Late-Stage Merger Talks With Omnicom (Bloomberg)
Publicis has a major presence in the Philadelphia area, particularly in healthcare.
Update: Publicis-Omnicom Deal Expected to Be Announced in Sunday Press Conference (Ad Age)


Germany's SAP seeks economy measures after sales warning (Reuters)

Why Does SAP Make Big Announcements on Sundays? (ASUG News)

Oracle OpenWorld: What to Expect (PC World)


Osage University Partners invests in Bill Gates-backed portable satellite antenna venture Kymeta





Tom Paine



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Bala Cynwyd-based Osage University Partners and The Kresge Foundation participated in a $50 million Series C financing alongside prior investors including Bill Gates, Lux Capital and Liberty Global in Kymeta Corporation, a Redmond, Washington-based maker of satellite communication antennas and systems. The investment was announced earlier this month.


Kymeta's first product, a portable satellite terminal, is expected to be available in 2015. It can be used to replace a satellite truck for news gathering, or to provide high-speed data communications for industries such as mining and energy exploration. The company says it is "pioneering the use of patented metamaterials technology that dynamically steers antenna beams with no moving parts, resulting in flat, thin, light, and highly adaptable antennas and communication terminals."

Kymeta was spun off from IP portfolio company Intellectual Ventures in August 2012.


Osage University Partners (OUP) is a $100 million venture capital fund that invests exclusively in startups that are commercializing university research. The fund is associated with VC firm Osage Partners.


Daily Links 7/26/2013: Bjork talks QLIK strategy; Britt to retire as Time Warner Cable chief









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Reactions to SAP co-CEO Snabe's departure range from cool to concerned (SearchSAP)

Glenn Britt to Retire as Time Warner Cable Chief (New York Times)

Publicis Said in Late-Stage Talks on Merger With Omnicom
(Bloomberg)

NewSpring Capital Leads Equity Investment in VidSys, Inc (Business Wire)
$15.65 million round in Virginia-based software company.

QLIK: Look Past Higher Expense to ‘.Next,’ Say Bulls (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Xtium Named to Lead411's 2013 “Hottest Companies in Pennsylvania” List (PR Web)

Hybrid Cloud Means Slower Sales Growth for Equinix (Data Center Knowledge)

What’s the Cloud’s Role in Tier-2 ERP? (ERP Cloud News)

NetSuite beats Q2 expectations as revenue climbed 35 percent
(ZDNet)


REVEALED: Hungry termites nibbling at Oracle's foundation
(The Register)

After demo day, incentivizing startups to settle down and stay awhile (Med City News)





Daily Links 7/25/2013: Bain Capital exec now CEO at Wilmington-based SevOne







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Jack Sweeney Leaves Bain Capital Ventures for CEO Slot at SevOne (Wall Street Journal: Venture Capital Dispatch)
Former CEO Phelan stepped down due to health reasons and will become strategic advisor to
SevOne, according to WSJ.
SevOne's Press Release


Fast Car: Uber Funding Auction Could Reach a $3.5B Valuation
(All Things D)

QlikTech Delivers Another Quarter of Strong Growth (Business Wire)
Radnor-based BI vendor reports 26% increase in revenue to $108 million.

Qlik Off 5%: Q2 Net Loss Misses; Q3, Year Views Light (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)


Safeguard Scientifics Announces Second Quarter 2013 Financial Results (Business Wire)

Quality Systems, Inc. Reports Fiscal 2014 First Quarter Results (Business Wire)
Parent of Horsham-based NextGen Healthcare says revenue down 7% and EPS off 16%, but the
all important "lead generation" metric increased by 172%.

Amazon files court complaint over CIA cloud deal (Federal Computer Week)

Business Insider Gives Advertiser [SAP] Veto Power Over 'Future of Business' Edit Mix (Ad Age)

User Group praises SAP’s new on-premise to cloud flexible licensing mode (Computerworld UK)


Dorm Room Fund-Backed Skillbridge Is A Freelance Marketplace For High-End Professional Services (TechCrunch)
Founded by Wharton School guys.

Many cloud computing services not subject to New Jersey sales tax
(Lexology)

TWC’s Britt To Retire At Year End
Board Selects COO Rob Marcus To Step in As Chairman CEO
(Multichannel News)



Daily Links 7/24/2013: Federal appeals court won't block Dish's Hopper








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IBM throws its weight behind Pivotal’s open source Cloud Foundry (VentureBeat)

Michael Dell raises bid for Dell (Fortune: Term Sheet)
Slightly. Shareholder meeting pushed back to August 2.

Unisys Announces Second-Quarter 2013 Financial Results (PR Newswire)
Revenue down 7%, earnings down more than 50%. However, results beat analyst expectations,
and the share price rose almost 6% today.

TE Connectivity net up 68% on lower expenses (MarketWatch)
TE Connectivity, formerly Tyco Electronics, has its North American headquarters in Berwyn.

Strange bedfellows: Aereo gets help from Time Warner Cable and Comcast (The Verge)

Federal Court Won't Block Dish's Hopper
Says lower court did not abuse discretion in denying preliminary injunction
(Broadcasting & Cable)

CBS Interactive Boss, NBCUniversal Top Executive Talk Hulu, Netflix, Apple (Hollywood Reporter)

Nascar Shifts TV Rights to NBC Starting In 2015 (Ad Age)

Chromecast Is Google’s Miracle Device (Wired)

Exclusive: Cox digs in on first FTTH project in O.C. (CED Magazine)

IBC, Penn Medicine, and DreamIt Ventures host first 'Demo Day' for DreamIt Health entrepreneurs (Globe Newswire)



Nucci departs Dell Boomi; Chris McNabb new GM







Tom Paine



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I just came across something that may not be news to many in the Philly Tech community, but on which I haven't seen any reporting or an announcement (and nobody sent me the memo).

Rick Nucci has left Dell Boomi as of May, where he was GM. Rick was co-founder of Boomi in 2000 and served as CTO up until then-GM Bob Moul's departure at the end of 2011 (Moul is now CEO of Artisan Mobile). He then became GM of Dell Boomi. He was the architect of Boomi's cloud app integration offering, the foundation of Boomi's success.

The new GM of Dell Boomi is Chris McNabb, who joined Dell Boomi as Director, Product Management in June 2011. Prior to that he was Senior VP of Software Engineering at SunGard Higher Education (now part of Ellucian), where Moul had previously been a top executive.

Dell announced it was acquiring Berwyn-based Boomi in November, 2010.

It will be interesting to see what's up next for Nucci.


Highlights from SAP conference call yesterday; McDermott says he has no political ambitions, will try to learn German







Tom Paine



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From SAP's conference call yesterday on its leadership transition, explaining Sunday's announcement that Jim Hagemann Snabe will step down as co-CEO in May 2014, leaving Newtown Square-based Bill McDermott as sole CEO. Snabe will be proposed for election to the SAP Supervisory Board in 2014.

(Transcript provided by Seeking Alpha)



Bill McDermott responds to question about whether he has political ambitions:

"First of all, I'm not exactly certain as to where this political rumor comes from. But I must admit, I've heard it enough times now that I'm happy you asked the question so I can set the record straight. The real passion of my professional life is SAP. And I have no plans nor have I ever had plans to run for public office. So we can take that completely off the table."

McDermott on staying at SAP for the term of his contract, which runs through 2017:

"I love working with SAP and the role that I have here and I fully intend to honor my contract, which runs through 2017. And who knows, I'm a young enough guy that I don't intend to head to a beach after 2017. So should the Supervisory Board want me longer, I'm not in any rush."

McDermott on spending more time in Germany, and learning to speak German:

"In terms of Germany and spending time in Germany, one of the magical parts of the co-CEO, combination of Jim and I, is we were very thoughtful about dividing our time, where it could be the best in service to our customers, our partners and of course, our employees. And you're absolutely right. With this new structure, when it does set in place, I'll absolutely spend more time in Germany, very committed to Germany. I've been with this company since 2002. I know a little bit about its heritage, its culture and the brilliant engineers that we have in Germany and the great workforce that we have in Germany. And I'm really looking forward to spending more time. I'm also at a point in my life where my wife and I are almost empty nesters. And when that happens, you just have a little bit more freedom, where you don't have to make it home every weekend. And I certainly will look to spend my fair share of times in Germany and Europe as well. In terms of learning Germany -- German, I certainly accept that challenge. It's something that I'd like to do a lot better at."

Snabe, on whether he is a lame duck:

"I think we have proven over 3 years now that we are very effective together. There's no reason why that shouldn't continue. We will continue to divide and conquer. Of course, we will use the 10 months to transition things as well. I think you'll see the company accelerating its pace, which is already very high. So no ducks here."


McDermott on Vishal Sikka (member of the Executive Board of SAP AG and the Global Managing Board, heading all SAP products and innovation) and Rob Enslin (president of Sales):

"And clearly, as you mentioned Vishal, I've said and Jim has repeatedly said as well, we think he is one of the great innovators in the world. So I would expect Vishal to jump in on the development and technology side in a huge way and lead us forward. That's his role. Now on the field and the go-to-market side, we have a guy by the name of Rob Enslin. So I see this beautiful connection between Vishal and Rob innovation immediately transferred to customer success, and that's much in the same way that Jim and I work. So we have really built the management team and the next generation of leaders in the company, and they're ready for that challenge."

McDermott, in closing remarks:

"It is our time, and we really have a great future in front of us and we're not going to let anything stand in the way of that."


Daily Links 7/22/2013: Unisys snares $460 million Fed contract for border protection systems; Edison Ventures invests in two firms








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Women in the Workplace: Comcast CFO talks candidly about juggling personal life, work (Glenside News Globe Times Chronicle)

Comcast's X1 availability widens, mass-deployment still planned by year's end (Engadget)

Comcast & TiVo Hit Pause (Zatz Not Funny!)

Sprout Adding 3 New Series (Multichannel News)
Sprout, which is owned by Comcast's NBCU, is based in Fort Washington.

Netflix Q2 results are in: close to 30MM US streaming subscribers, $1B in revenue
(Gigaom)

Netflix Subscriber Growth Falls Short of Projections (Bloomberg)


TV tech: SeventySix sells Omek to Intel; Mass.firm moves to Radnor (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

Unisys scores $460M contract to modernize border protection systems
(Washington Technology)

Edison Ventures Announces Investment in RealMatch (PR Web)
Leads $7 million round with $6 million investment.

Edison Ventures Invests in eSentire Provider of Network Security as a Managed Service (PR Web)
Leads $5.5 million investment in a $7.0 million total financing round in Ontario, Canada based eSentire.

RightCare Solutions, Inc. Reports Positive Topline Results with D2S2 in Reducing All-Cause 30-day Readmissions from Pivotal Study (PR Newswire)


SAP: McDermott to become sole CEO in 2014







Tom Paine



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SAP announced yesterday that Jim Hagemann Snabe has decided to step down as co-CEO as of May 2014. He will then join SAP's supervisory board, if 25% of shareholders approve. Snabe,47, said in a statement: “After more than 20 years with SAP, I have decided that it is time for me to begin the next phase of my career, closer to my family. What the entire SAP team has achieved since 2010 is remarkable, and the momentum we have built is now driving the transformation of the industry.”



This change will leave an American, Bill McDermott,51, as SAP's sole CEO for the time being, at least. McDermott has been based out of Newtown Square; SAP hasn't said whether this will continue to be the case. Perhaps SAP's next most important executive, Vishal Sikka, the board member responsible for technology and innovation, is based in Palo Alto, California. SAP is based in Walldorf, Germany.

Co-founder Hasso Plattner, who chairs SAP's supervisory board, has a stake of about 10 percent in the company and plays an important role in providing strategic guidance.


More information is expected from SAP in a conference call today.