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Life beyond UCSC

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Title: Life beyond UCSC


1
Life beyond UCSC ISTM(one example)
Management of Technology Seminar UC Santa
Cruz Mike Ruggiero October 2007
2
Overview
  • Who am I And how did I end up in the ISTM
    program
  • What am I My professional career, past,
    present, and future
  • Whats it all about now - Seagate
  • What the _at_! it got to do with you -
    Testimonials

For first fiscal quarter ended September 28,
2007 Includes interns, contractors, and agency
temps
3
Who Am I - History
  • Information Storage Systems - Chemistry
    Technician Drive assembly and test
  • Atari Video games PCB test and repair
  • BTI and LMSC Systems Field Service
  • Tandem Computers
  • Support Specialist, Hardware and Operating
    Systems SW
  • SW Developer
  • New Product Development Manager
  • Sun Microsystems Solaris Dev. Program Manager
  • Starfish SW Professional Service Manager

For first fiscal quarter ended September 28,
2007 Includes interns, contractors, and agency
temps
4
Who Am I - History
  • Huffman Letter
  • Subj Statement of Qualification for Huffman
    Prize for 2006
  • Dear Judges,
  • As a nomine for the Huffman Prize for 2006, I
    must admit that my quest for higher learning can
    be summarized by a quote from Mark Twain, I have
    never let my schooling interfere with my
    education. I first attended UCSC in 1974. A
    transfer student, I was intent on turning my
    talent for chemistry and electronics into a
    geology degree. Sadly, my plan was to make lots
    of money working for the oil companies. Coming to
    Santa Cruz for university studies changed my
    fate. I quickly developed a fondness for sailing
    (or the glamour of adventure it embodied). At the
    end of the second quarter I dropped out, took my
    remaining funds, and went in on a three way
    partnership of a 36, ocean going catamaran. The
    plan was to sail to Tahiti. After a year and a
    half of planning, practice and saving we set
    sail. The journey took us to San Diego where we
    stayed far too long, had way too much fun, and
    spent all our money. I was lucky I returned to
    Santa Cruz and began my 25 years of immersion in
    the exploding information technology industry.
  • During my absence from the university, I lived
    and breathed computer hardware and software in
    Silicon Valley. At first I worked for ISS
    (Information Storage Systems) as a chemistry
    technician making ferrous metal ingots. These
    were to be the core material for manufacturing
    disk read/write heads. After my UCSC and sailing
    adventures, I worked at Tandem computers for 18
    years. Much of this time was spent traveling the
    world as a senior field support analyst
    diagnosing both system hardware and operating
    system software. When I left Tandem I went to
    work at Sun Microsystems as the Solaris
    Integration Program Manager. Most recently, I
    worked at Starfish Software as a professional
    services project manager.
  • While at Tandem, I played many roles besides that
    of field analyst. These included software
    developer, project manager, and development
    manager. At one point I was a project lead for
    the roll-out of their world-wide remote support
    centers. My primary focus was the specification
    of utilities and processes used to implement the
    centers. As one of the knowledge experts to
    engineering, I helped develop remote
    methodologies (software and hardware) for
    isolating subsystem failures on live, mission
    critical, systems and networks. While at Tandem I
    also documented, designed, and built (stuffed the
    ICs and wire-wrapped all the connections) my own
    6800 based computer system. I developed a
    rudimentary OS and a memory mapped dart score
    board application for the game of Cricket, which
    was all written in assembly language and
    streamlined to fit in two 8k-byte banks of ROM
    memory. This was a self-learning project.
  • As Albert Einstein said, the devils in the
    details. Based on my work experience, I know
    there is one key skill sorely needed in industry
    today. It is the ability to take a large,
    non-convergent problem, extract the relevant
    data, and massage that data into focused,
    convergent pieces, pieces to which solid
    scientific and engineering techniques can be
    applied to find optimal solutions. I believe my
    experience here at UCSC has furthered my ability
    to do exactly that. I leave UCSC with a new lease
    on my career. It has not been just schooling it
    has been a truly educational experience.
  • Michael Ruggiero

For first fiscal quarter ended September 28,
2007 Includes interns, contractors, and agency
temps
5
Corporate OverviewOctober 2007
6
Seagate Storage Leader
  • Seagate is the worlds leading provider of hard
    disc drives
  • Q1 FY2008 47.2M drives shipped revenue of
    3.3B
  • Provides storage solutions for Enterprise,
    Desktop, Mobile Computing, Consumer Electronics
    and Branded Retail markets
  • Share leader in Desktop, Enterprise and Consumer
    Electronics
  • 36 overall market share highest in the industry
  • Broadest product offering in the industry
    Largest customer base
  • Ownership and vertical integration of critical
    technologies heads, media and motors
  • Approximately 54,992 employees worldwide
  • Acquired Maxtor Corporation
  • Acquired Evault
  • Forbes Magazine 2006 Company of the Year

For first fiscal quarter ended September 28,
2007 Includes interns, contractors, and agency
temps
7
Seagates Global Presence
Springtown Limavady, N. Ireland
Minneapolis, MN
Bray, Ireland
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Emeryville, Fremont, Milpitas, Sunnyvale, Scotts
Valley, CA
Paris, France
Beijing, China
Toronto, Canada
Tokyo, Japan
Shrewsbury, MA
Wuxi, China
Pittsburgh, PA
Suzhou, China
Delhi, India
Shanghai, China
Oklahoma City, OK
Bangkok Korat, Thailand
Taiwan
Longmont, CO
Penang, Malaysia
Ang Mo Kio, Science Park Woodlands, Singapore
Drives and Components Regional HQs and Sales
Seagate Services
8
Seagate Leadership Model
  • Technology Leadership
  • Own and develop underlying technology
  • Industry-leading investment in RD
  • Product Leadership
  • Industrys broadest product line
  • Vertical Integration
  • Own the key components that drive product
    strategy
  • Scale and Leverage
  • World class manufacturing and flexible supply
    chain

9
Seagates Product Line
Handheld
Notebook
8 Markets 40 Products 100 Revenue Access
Gaming
Desktop
Auto
External
DVR
Enterprise
10
Industry Trends - Digital Content Landscape
Forming
DVRs, HH, Gaming, Cars, Backup...
Video, Photos, Movies, Music...
Content Enjoyment
Content Creation
11
Q1 Financial Highlights
12
RD Investment (last 4 consecutive quarters)
Millions
13
Market Share Estimates
Total Market - All Form Factors - Preliminary
Growth Y/Y 15 Q/Q 19
Q1 FY08 132.4M Units
Q4 FY07 111.2M Units
Source Seagate Market Research
14
Product Update
15
Q1 Product Highlights
  • Consumer Electronics shipped 5.7 million units
  • DVR shipments rose 35 year-over-year
  • Mobile Computing shipped 7.9 million units
  • 50 of shipments were 120GB or more
  • Enterprise Products shipped 4.6 million units
  • 2.5-inch drive shipments reached 1.8 million
    units
  • Desktop Products shipped 29 million units
  • Shipped 1.5 million 750GB products
  • Branded Products
  • Refreshed and redesigned Maxtor OneTouch Family

16
Mobile Computing Products
Momentus
  • Market leading technology
  • The worlds first 2.5-inch notebook drive using
    perpendicular recording
  • Capacities up to 160GB and spin speeds up to
    7200 RPM
  • Momentus 5400 Full Disc Encryption (FDE) prevents
    unauthorized data access
  • Hybrid technology increases performance,
    reliability, and battery life
  • Free-fall protection for beefed-up laptop
    durability

17
Consumer Electronics Products - DVR
DB35
  • Seagate continues as 1 supplier of hard drives
    for DVRs
  • The highest capacity1TBhard drive for DVR
    systems
  • DVR market shipments to reach over 54 million
    units in 2010 to drive a compound annual growth
    rate of nearly 20 through the forecast period

Digital Video Recorder/ DVD Combination
LG PY2DR
High-Definition DVR
18
Handheld Products
Lyrion
  • 60GB for handheld audio and video devices
  • G-Force protection for toughest 1.8-inch hard
    drive on the market
  • Worldwide 2005 - 2009 compound annual growth rate
    (CAGR) for Portable Media Players is 95

Source IDC, 2005
19
Ruggedized Products
EE25
  • EE25 Series meets rugged demands of the
    automotive, industrial, aerospace and marine tech
    markets
  • 2.5 drive designed for operation at environmental
    extremes high vibration, high humidity,
    wide-ranging temperatures
  • Up to 80 Gbytes

20
Consumer Electronics Products Surveillance
SV35
  • First hard drive specifically engineered for
    commercial video security market
  • 1TB up to 32 days of high-quality, continuous
    recording
  • Unique combination of features improves
    performance, power management and reliability
  • Global video surveillance camera revenue will
    grow to more than 9 billion by 2011 with 13.2
    CAGR, up from 4.9 billion in 2006 (iSuppli,
    March 2007)
  • Global market for network video surveillance
    technologies expected to reach 2.6 billion by
    2010 (IMS Research, January 2007)

21
Consumer Electronics Products Seagate D.A.V.E.
Technology Platform
  • Delivers the best way to move, store and connect
    your digital life, wirelessly connecting mobile
    devices.
  • Up to 60GB of storage
  • Powerful Bluetooth 2.0 and Wi-Fi connection
  • Highly customizable Designed to be easily
    branded by mobile device manufacturers, network
    carriers, automotive companies, and others

22
Who Am I - Now
  • Seagate, Sr. Global Supply Analyst
  • Supply Optimization
  • Supply Allocation
  • Supply Revenue and Linearity alignment
  • Progenitor of 2 tools
  • HeatMap Supply/Demand reconciliation
  • Demand Signal Optimized forecast for production
    planning
  • Lead for Optimization Tool

For first fiscal quarter ended September 28,
2007 Includes interns, contractors, and agency
temps
23
Allocation Overview
  • Vision
  • Daily and Weekly Execution Deliverables
  • Allocation Ownership
  • Judgment Process
  • Forecasts Accuracy and Reality (SSD)
  • Reporting Content
  • Functional Interaction
  • Open Items / Actions

24
Vision Allocation Management
  • Escalation path for customers to gain additional
    supply for demand coverage
  • Production planning remains step one in supply
    issues
  • Owns forecast alignment to the revenue plan
  • PLM is consulted in any forecast gaps to the
    revenue plan
  • Owns the forecast that drive 6 months of factory
    planning
  • Responsible for prioritizing any builds that
    result in customer or revenue trade-offs
  • Communication vehicle for field sales to get
    reliable and prompt supply status

25
Daily / Weekly Execution
  • Whos Short Report - Daily
  • Verify entries and target response/closure within
    48 hours
  • Communicate back to AM/Sales on ability to close
  • Judged Demand Signal Weekly Tuesday COB
  • BU and PLM issues Weekly / Monthly
  • Status updates
  • Transition calls and qualification issues
  • Substitution Matrix
  • Retail Supply Line and Forecasting Management -
    Weekly
  • Ad hoc supply issues and Reporting - Daily
  • Factory calls materials, manufacturing, launch
    quality Weekly
  • Master Schedule analysis

26
Allocation Ownership
  • Allocation Management
  • Allocation for WW customers and all Business
    Segments
  • Optimization of build plans to align supply to
    demand as well as message supply opportunity
    positioning
  • Support the current quarter revenue plan across
    all BUs
  • Align to the Inventory Targets (turns) while
    effectively messaging the importance of customer
    agreements, buffers and supply continuity
  • Current Quarter
  • Reactive - Whos Short Report identifies field
    sales shortages
  • Proactive - Heat Map
  • Ownership of all allocation / revenue trade-offs
    with inputs from Sales Management
  • Future Quarter
  • Heat map (next) proactively analyzes by ST
    model, 9-digit and customer
  • 6 Month view Supply Status tests MBS plans
    against Judged Demand and Buffer requirements

27
Allocation - Functional Interaction
  • Functional Groups
  • Issues and Escalations

28
HeatMap User Views Interfaces
Configure Pivot Data
2
Main Pivot Table
Drilldown
1
3
Limit Query Data
Configure Pivot Table
29
Simple Linear Programming
A Linear Program (LP) is a problem that can be
expressed into a standard form as follows
Minimize or Maximize cx (Objective
Function) subject to Ax
b (Constraints and variables) Where
xgt0 The word "Programming" is used here in the
sense of planning".
30
Optimization Model Components
Customer Specific (constraints)
  • Current Demand (by Month and 9 Digit Model)
  • AUP, AUC (6 Digit)
  • Customer Ranking (Strategic Importance, Pricing
    Tier, Loyalty, and Mgmt Commitment factors)

Business Goals (objective or constraints)
  • Maximum Profitability, Net Revenue, or Market
    Share

Supply Specific (constraints)
  • MBS (6 Digit)
  • Material Availability ( of Discs by Mth)

31
Sample Optimization Model
AUP/AUC by Customer by Model
Supply Constraint
Customer Ranking
Dmd by Mth by 9-Digit
Profit Maxi. Goal
32
Sample Optimization Outputs
BY MODEL
BY CUSTOMER
33
Whats It Mean to You
  • Testimonials
  • Jason Sr. Analyst, Revenue Planning
  • Kevin Account Manager
  • Colin Manufacturing Program Manager
  • Ming International Trade Analyst
  • Finance/Accounting
  • Mai Sales Operations, Pricing Analyst

For first fiscal quarter ended September 28,
2007 Includes interns, contractors, and agency
temps
34
Summary
  • Jason D  Demant/Seagate                         
                         
  • My current role is a revenue planning analyst in
    our Branded Solutions BU.I own our quarterly
    revenue plans, which includes getting forecasts
    fromSales, hosting meetings to lock on prices
    and then crunching through quitea few numbers to
    give our BU and corporate group visibility into
    thecurrent quarter and 4 quarters out. During
    off cycle times, I typically doad-hoc reports
    and excel reports. I spend my time primarily
    analyzing dataand doing various things in Excel.
    This role is more of a finance typerole.For
    this role I've created basic SQL queries which I
    learned at UCSC.Primarily though I use basic
    business knowledge acquired there as well.This
    is my second position at Seagate. I started in
    Customer Service as aproject manager. The
    primary project I worked on was creating a new
    returnsprocess for our end-users. We now
    incorporate eCommerce into the returnsprocess
    and sell upgrades, advanced replacement and
    expedited shipping tocustomers via the returns
    process.Thanks,Jason DemantSr. Analyst,
    Revenue PlanningSeagate Branded Solutions (SBS)

35
Summary
  • Kevin K Wang                                     
           
  • In my first 2 years at Seagate I have been one
    of the Account Managers onour Corporate Accounts
    ( Big 6, accounts for approx 60 of revenue),
    SunMicrosystems.  This job really focuses on
    Supply Chain Management and isreally the heart
    of how to manage supply vs demand.  As an Account
    Manageryou are the customer facing agent that
    has to work customer upsides/ mixchanges/ as
    well as any other opportunities customers will
    throw at you.Account Managers deal with every
    part of the company from understandingcustomer
    requirements to knowing the details of how a HDD
    work so you canrelate things back to your
    engineering team.  As an Account Manager you
    arefulfilling the new build production side of
    the business meaning thatweather its IBM, DELL,
    EMC, HP, or Sun Microsystems, we sell Hard Drives
    toall of them!Account Managers are the
    supporting force of sales.  Sales makes the
    dealsand Account Management makes those deals
    happen.  Even though it is toughto deal with
    high demanding customers day-in and day-out, it
    does requirelots of attention to detail as well
    as a complete understanding of how
    yourcustomer's business works, because at the
    end of the day you are assuccessful as your
    customer is.The skills that I have used from my
    days at UCSC would have to be allprimarily from
    ISM 225, only because my role dealt strictly with
    SCM.   Oneeye opener for me was that all the
    case studies that Subhas reviewed inclass were
    just that, "case studies".  After being deployed
    into the realworld I soon came to figure out
    that not EVERY works how it was planned towork. 
    For example EDI signaling demand are not always
    processed through,another example could be that
    due to weather conditions your product willnot
    arrive due to airports being shut down, etc.  It
    is not until youexperience all these real life
    situations that you realize how difficult
    itreally is to keep big Corporations running the
    way they do.

36
Summary
  • Kevin - continued                               
                   
  • Now I have just taken on a new position as a
    Senior Planner working inSales Operations.  This
    job will focus primarily at take manual
    processesand creating automated tools to help
    eliminate the time needed to performthese manual
    tasks.  My new role will be focusing on taking
    currentprocesses and streamlining them to allow
    our internal team to spend moretime analyzing
    data rather than spending the time pulling it.  I
    will alsobe attacking the customer side of this
    as well by making all theseimprovements more of
    a collaborative effort to help both parties in
    thelong run.One thing that I wish the program
    did touch more on was Microsoft skills (i.e.
    Access and Excel).  I had no idea how much these
    tools could do until Istarted using them in the
    real world.  I used some very basic and
    beginnerfunctions in excel but never used it to
    the extent I do today (one examplebeing Pivot
    tables).  This I think would be very beneficial
    for anyonegoing into Corporate America where
    Microsoft tools are the norm andeveryone has to
    adapt to use them (regardless of how horrible
    they are).Other than that I think the courses
    and work load in this major fits intothe high
    tech industry being that more and more companies
    are now lookingfor those who are business savvy
    and have a technical background.  Withthis kind
    of combination you become a very valuable asset
    to any company.Best Regards,Kevin
    WangAccount ManagerBusiness ManagementSeagate
    Technology, LLC

37
Summary
  • Colin Lee/Seagate                               
                1) Global Supply Chain Analyst
  •       I'll leave this for you, since we were in
    the same group.2) Materials Factory Manager
  • Responsible for all aspects of managing the ODM.
    Own materials buffer management, tooling
    capacity and production, demand
    forecasting,Ramping product production, Mass
    production, End Of Life Management,packaging,
    cost negotiations, and ODM relationship.ISM 225
    really helped in that I use buffer calculations,
    formula andforecasting frequently in my day to
    day tasks. It also helped open my eyesto new
    buffer strategies and helped me build custom
    strategies for my ODM'sdifferent
    products.Thanks,ColinMaterials Factory
    ManagerSeagate Branded Solutions

38
Summary
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