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Rising star bows out of SAP

Shai Agassi taking an alternative route to the top?

Tags: agassi, sap

By Dawn Kawamoto

Published: 29 March 2007 08:17 BST

Shai Agassi, once a rising star at SAP, is leaving software in favour of a possible switch to the hot alternative-energy sector.

The world's largest enterprise software application vendor announced Agassi is departing at the end of the week as president of its product and technology group. Leo Apotheker, head of marketing, is now serving as deputy CEO, and a new executive council will take charge on Sunday.

Hasso Plattner, company founder and chairman of the SAP Supervisory Board, said in a statement: "While we regret Shai's decision to leave, we congratulate him on his record of achievement at SAP. Shai drove the company's successful platform strategy, led innovation that helped SAP grow and continue market leadership, as well as set the stage for the future of business software."

Agassi's resignation comes as a surprise, given events over the past two months.

Agassi, a relative newcomer to the company, had been viewed as a potential successor to SAP's current CEO, Henning Kagermann. Kagermann's term was set to expire later this year but, last month, SAP's supervisory board voted to extend Kagermann's contract until May 2009.

Some with influence over the CEO selection process had said the extension would have provided Agassi with the time needed to lay out his big technology plans. Up until the past eight months, Agassi had been in a dead heat with Apotheker as Kagermann's potential successor. But in recent months, Apotheker had gained ground as a front-runner due to his long tenure with the company and responsibility over a substantially larger portion of it, sources said.

The decision to extend Kagermann's contract did not sit well with Agassi, who wanted to ascend to the CEO spot on a faster track, Plattner said.

Plattner, who had passed the baton of SAP's future technology developments to Agassi four years ago, noted he had also wanted Agassi to succeed Kagermann as CEO.

He said: "I had shared with Shai my plan that he should become successor to Henning Kagermann as a co-CEO for SAP. With the extension of Henning's contract to 2009, it became apparent that Shai was not comfortable committing to a 10- to 15-year period, which was not in keeping with his personal career timeline. Given this, I made the recommendation to the supervisory board that we change our plans and now adjust SAP's executive management team responsibilities."

The new executive council will be composed of SAP officers who will report to Kagermann. The council, which reports to SAP's executive board, will handle product and marketing strategies aimed toward faster customer response and growing the business under its 2010 goals. The council's executives will report to Kagermann.

Agassi, meanwhile, has his eye on alternative energy.

He said in a statement: "I look forward to new opportunities and working on issues that are important to me, including alternative energy and environmental-policy issues, as well as the future of Israel."

No plans were announced of Agassi joining a particular company. Plattner said the young executive is likely to build an alternative-energy company rather than join one. "Shai has always said [being SAP's chief executive] is not the last thing he wants to do with his life," Plattner said.

Agassi will be retained as a special consultant to SAP's supervisory board chairman office, the company said. He will provide advice on technology, innovation and competitive trends, and maintain an office on the company's Palo Alto, California, campus.

Dawn Kawamoto writes for CNET News.com

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