Cover Story


Shared vision



How Mike Klayko and his employees hold each other accountable for Brocade Communications’ growth

By Leslie Stevens-Huffman


Smart Business Northern California | August 2008

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It’s rare that CEOs are promoted from within organizations these days. Given the increasing pressures of the position and the need for quick results, many boards turn to outside hires when the CEO position is vacated. It’s rarer still that company employees would nominate one of their peers for the top job in the company and that the board would heed their suggestion.

But that’s exactly what happened in January 2005 when Mike Klayko became CEO of Brocade Communications Systems Inc.

Considering that the company’s previous CEO and the vice president of human resources had just resigned because of a stock backdating scandal, Klayko entered the role when the company was in crisis mode.

“It was a tough time,” Klayko says. “The company situation was turbulent, and we had lots of internal and external pressures on us, and suddenly, I was the new boy in the CEO suite. The easiest thing would have been to stay in my position as head of sales and marketing or go look for something else. After all, I had been with the company since 2003, and I knew the industry and the sales and marketing division well. When my peers came to me and said that they wanted me and would support me to become the new CEO and I received support from the board and my wife, all of the pieces just came together.”

Surrounded by shattered trust, Klayko says that he needed to rebuild confidence both internally and externally, but he says that he also knew that rebuilding trust takes time.

In addition, another situation waiting for Klayko was the fact that even prior to the stock backdating crisis, the excitement among employees in the company had waned, organic growth had subsided and Brocade had become reliant on a very small product base. In short, he says, the company was stagnant.

In order to establish a platform that would serve as a launch-pad for new growth initiatives, Klayko prioritized his initial repositioning efforts on increasing accountability, establishing a shared vision and creating a new culture. Klayko says that executing his plan consistently, over time, would eventually return trust to Brocade.

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