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Mark Hurd
Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd will join Oracle as a co-president. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd will join Oracle as a co-president. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Former HP chief Mark Hurd joins Oracle

This article is more than 13 years old
Mark Hurd, former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, has joined Oracle as a 'co-president'

Oracle has hired former Hewlett-Packard chief executive Mark Hurd to help lead the database software maker in a pivotal moment in Oracle's 33-year history.

Oracle and HP are longtime partners, but Hurd's appointment as co-president of Oracle underscores the growing fissure between the Silicon Valley heavyweights and stems from Oracle CEO Larry Ellison's belief that his friend Hurd was railroaded out of a job at HP.

Oracle already had two presidents.

One of them – Charles Phillips, a former Marine and investment banker who was with Oracle for seven years – is resigning to make room for Hurd. The other, Safra Catz, Oracle's former chief financial officer, is staying.

Ellison said that Phillips wanted to leave in December, but that Ellison asked him to stay through the integration of Sun Microsystems.

Phillips was in the news earlier this year when pictures of him snuggling with his former mistress appeared on billboards around the US. Ellison said Oracle will miss Phillips' talent and leadership but that he respects Phillips' decision to leave.

Oracle said in a statement that Hurd will also serve as a member of the board of directors. He will report to Ellison.

Ellison praised Hurd's tenure at HP and said no other executive had more relevant experience.

"Mark did a brilliant job at HP and I expect he'll do even better at Oracle," he said. "There is no executive in the IT world with more relevant experience than Mark. Oracle's future is engineering complete and integrated hardware and software systems for the enterprise."

HP and Oracle have worked together for 25 years. The relationship is straining because Oracle now competes in one of HP's biggest businesses, selling the servers that power businesses' back offices.

Hurd's new job is evidence that Oracle plans to push harder into more areas where Oracle's and HP's businesses overlap.

The latest moves amount to little more than management maneuvering involving business celebrities, with Hurd and Ellison being two of the biggest names in technology, and Hurd's ouster from HP being one of the great dramas in Silicon Valley history.

In hiring Hurd, Oracle doesn't necessarily get everything he knows. Part of Hurd's severance package from HP which could top $40m (£26m) includes a confidentiality agreement that restricts what he can tell a future employer about internal HP dealings.

Still, what Oracle is getting is Hurd's ability to steer a sprawling technology company and find ways to make it even bigger. HP cleared $114bn in revenue in its last fiscal year, while Oracle had nearly $27bn.

Hurd is being tapped as Oracle undergoes a similar transformation to the one he spearheaded in his five years atop HP.

Hurd resigned from HP a month ago following a sexual harassment investigation. The investigation unearthed inaccurate expense reports connected with Hurd's outings with his eventual accuser, an actress and HP contractor named Jodie Fisher.

She claimed that her work helping organise HP events dried up after she rebuffed Hurd's advances.

Hurd, 53, who is married with two children, denies making any advances on Fisher. Hurd also insists he didn't prepare his own expenses and didn't try to conceal his outings with Fisher, which often included dinner after the events Fisher helped organize and that Hurd attended.

Ellison loudly came to Hurd's defense.

He called HP's decision to oust Hurd the worst personnel decision since Apple forced out Steve Jobs 25 years ago. Ellison said the HP board's decision to publicly disclose the harassment claim against Hurd amounted to "cowardly corporate political correctness", as the board had found that Hurd didn't violate the company's sexual harassment policies.

HP has emphasised that its board voted unanimously for Hurd's resignation.

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