Conferences, Commentary & More
Home
Complete archive of features and news articles, sample policies and procedures, assessments, and surveys.
Network and exchange ideas with other members in the forums or ask an expert in one of the hosted forums.
Access vendor directories, product case studies and showcases.
Read Best in Shows, view our conference calendar, read commentaries and take our news poll.
The Hot List
Blogs
Topic Channels
Comp, Benefits, Rewards
HR Management
Legal Insight
Recruiting and Staffing
Software and Technology
Training and Development
= Member Only
Workforce HR Jobs
Post Your Job
Post Your Resume



Subscribe Now
Workforce Magazine
Subscriber Help
























= Member Only


Feature:

Best in Shows: Notes From Key Workforce Management Conferences and Conventions

  

Vurv Revolution 2006


May 21-24 at Disney's Grand Floridian Resort, Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

Event: Vurv Revolution 2006 (annual user conference)

May 21-24 at Disney's Grand Floridian Resort, Lake Buena Vista, Florida

Conference info: For more information about Vurv, go to www.vurv.com.

Day 3: Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Goodbye, customization: Vurv, which has a history of building nearly all customized products for clients, is moving toward a more conventional, standardized software model. Missy Greene, Vurv's senior vice president for products, says the company is handling very few big, customized projects these days and that most clients are moving to Vurv's conventional software offerings. Not only does this make it easier for Vurv to maintain and support a more standardized software model over time, but the company can also make money in the upgrade process. But CEO Derek Mercer was clear that Vurv would continue to support customized users. "The custom model will still be there," he says. "You can stay on it as long as you like and we will support you."

Is there an IPO in your future? One of the last sessions on the last day of the Vurv conference was a Q&A session with the company's top executives. The first question was brutally simple and direct: "When are you going public?" CEO Mercer was equally straightforward in his response: "We have big plans, but we'll wait until we're ready." He added that the recent addition of a new CFO (Mark Silverman) with 12 years of public-company experience is one of the steps that Vurv needed to take to get ready for an initial public offering. Although Mercer was clear that there are no expectations for when an offering might happen, the fact that the company invited a number of investment bankers to the conference, and that Mercer was incredibly open and upfront about Vurv's projected financial picture, leads me to believe that a Vurv IPO will come much sooner rather than later--perhaps this year or early in 2007.

Business center blues: If you travel and ever use a hotel business center, you'll appreciate this. Computer access at Disney's Grand Floridian Hotel is the most expensive I have found anywhere in America--an outrageous $10 for 15 minutes, with no discount for longer use. So, an hour of PC use will cost you a cool $40. That tops the $7.50 for 15 minutes I was hit with at a Marriott in Tucson, Arizona. As bad as $40 an hour sounds, there is a silver lining: The credit card/hotel room scanner in the Grand Floridian business center was not functioning most of the time, so I was only charged about one-third of the time. Can we blame Michael Eisner for this, too?

--JH


Day 2: Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Morning keynote, Day 2: British business consultant Rene Carayol, author of Corporate Voodoo, has been busy at the Vurv conference generally acting as the master of ceremonies. Today, he was the keynote speaker, treading on the same ground as so many other keynote speakers I've heard recently and preaching the benefits of building on one's strengths rather than focusing on weaknesses. It's a good topic that resonates with the crowd, but it also follows the same Peter Drucker-Marcus Buckingham approach and concept. Still, Carayol is more pointed than most on the need to focus on strengths at the HR department--and the famous lack of business acumen that exists in human resources. "It's easier to teach a business person HR than to teach an HR person business," he says. If you are in HR, "are you a process expert, or are you a leader helping us to make more money?" And in a point that would be more pointed if it were made at the SHRM annual conference in Washington, D.C., next month, he says, "The HR industry is at a fork in the road--and this one we can't afford to get wrong. ... The HR industry is geared at looking at weaknesses rather than strengths. There's just too much focus on what people are not good at. ... The HR industry can be the owners of talent ... can catch what people are doing right, but they need to break free of process and procedures if they are really going to add value."

The founder speaks (again): Vurv founder and CEO Derek Mercer gave an insightful state-of-the-company speech with lots of numbers and projections for Vurv's growth. And as one analyst noted, he gave much more detail than Taleo did at its user conference here in Orlando earlier this month--and Taleo is a publicly traded company, while Vurv is still private.

The details of his talk:

  • Vurv has expanded geographically, with an office in Paris, a data center in Sydney, Australia, and an 18-person office in London.
  • A lot of new people have been added to the management team, including a new CFO, director of operations and a country manager for France.
  • Revenue has grown from $3.9 million in 2002 to $35.3 million in 2005, and is projected to reach $52.5 million in 2006.
  • Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, is projected to go from a $5.6 million loss in 2005 to a $3.3 million profit in 2006.
  • Projections for 2007 are $76.1 million in revenue and EBITDA of $11.6 million.
  • Projections for 2008 are $104.4 million in revenue and EBITDA of $22.8 million.
  • Projections for 2009 are $140.4 million in revenue and EBITDA of $42.4 million.

According to Mercer, "We are a very open organization ... and feedback is critical to our success."

--JH


Day 1: Monday, May 22, 2006

If this is a technology conference, then it must be Orlando: What is it about technology companies and software makers meeting in Orlando? With the Vurv Technology conference this week here at Disney World, this makes no less than four events of this sort here in Central Florida this spring. Vurv (known until February as Recruitmax Software) follows SAP here last week, Taleo earlier this month, and Lawson Software in April. Florida can be nice, but this is a little more Mickey Mouse and big-league humidity than I can stand.

Morning keynote, Day 1: Former Apple executive and current venture capitalist Guy Kawasaki wrote the book, Rules for Revolutionaries, that inspired the theme for this user conference. Not surprisingly, Vurv founder and CEO Derek Mercer is a big fan of Kawasaki's, and has adopted many of his "rules" as part of his own credo. Kawasaki talked about "The Art of Innovation" and said that his talk reflects "what you should do, not what I did, because I did many things wrong."

Some of his rules include:

  • Jump to the next curve (his observation that your goal shouldn't be to do things only 10 percent 20 percent better, but 10 times better).
  • Hire infected people who generate revolutionary change (infected being infected with a love for your product or service).
  • Polarize people (create products that people love or hate passionately).

Kawasaki also did a riff on the utter stupidity of companies hiring high-paid consultants to help churn out generic mission statements (he used Wendy’s as an example). You can get the same gobbledygook using the Dilbert Random Mission Statement generator, he says.

The founder speaks: Vurv CEO and founder Derek Mercer followed Guy Kawasaki and was just about the exact opposite in style and temperament. Where Kawasaki was cool, calm and introspective, Mercer was passionate, gregarious and excitable. He borrowed from author Steve Farber in describing himself as an "extreme leader," saying, "The extreme leader is a generator, a powerful force for action." He added, "I am an enthusiastic believer in people and their capacity to do the awesome." This is not your typical CEO-speak, but then, typical CEOs don’t describe themselves as an overgrown surfer as Mercer does. Don't be fooled though; he did say he "pushes people to their capacity," looking for his staff to work from 8 to 8. That's more typical CEO talk, of course, and his passion and drive are clearly a large part of what is behind Vurv's 109 percent compound annual growth rate since 2002.

--John Hollon

 


Next Article: 20. SAP Sapphire '06
May 16-18, 2006, at the Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Florida

Top of Feature | Features Archive

           
E-mail this document Printer-friendly version Write to the Editor Reprint Information

Reproductions and distribution of the above article are strictly prohibited. To order reprints and/or request permission to use the article in full or partial format, please contact our Reprint Sales Manager at (732) 723-0569.



Feature Contents
Top of Feature

1. Recruiting 2006 Conference and Expo.
November 8-9, Jacob Javits Center, New York City

2. HRO World Europe Annual Conference
November 6-8, the Conrad Hotel, Brussels, Belgium

3. The National Business Coalition on Health Annual Conference
November 5-7, the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel, New Orleans

4. HR.com Employers of Excellence 2006 Conference
October 24-27, 2006, Red Rock Casino Resort, Las Vegas

5. Oracle OpenWorld 2006
October 22-26, 2006, Moscone Center, San Francisco

6. Pensions & Investments' Seventh Annual West Coast Defined Contribution Conference
October 8-10, 2006, the Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

7. Human Resource Executive's Ninth Annual HR Technology Conference & Exposition
October 4-6, 2006, Navy Pier, Chicago

8. The Motivation Show 2006--Business Solutions That Motivate People
September 26-28, 2006, McCormick Place South, Chicago

9. The Conference Board 2006 Human Resources Outsourcing Conference
September 19-20, the Drake Hotel, Chicago

10. 19th Annual Benefits Management Forum and Expo
September 17-19, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Chicago

11. World Business Forum 2006
September 12-13, Radio City Music Hall, New York City

12. OnRec Expo 2006—Global Summit for Online Recruitment
September 12-13, 2006, at the Donald E. Stephens Convention and Conference Center, Chicago

13. The Conference Board 2006 Hot Topics & Hot Issues HR Forum--Dilemmas, Demographics & Direction
July 18-19, 2006, at the Marriott Marquis Hotel, New York City

14. Workforce Innovations 2006
July 11-13, 2006, Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, California

15. Society for Human Resource Management
June 25-28, 2006, Washington, D.C.

16. World Business Forum Chicago 2006
June 6-7, 2006 at Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois

17. 2006 Workstream User Conference
May 23-24, San Francisco Hilton Financial District, San Francisco

18. The Conference Board 2006 Leadership Development Conference—Developing a New Cadre of Global Leaders for Top-line Growth
May 24-25, 2006, at the Coronado Island Marriott, Coronado, California

19. Vurv Revolution 2006


20. SAP Sapphire '06
May 16-18, 2006, at the Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Florida

21. Consumer Directed Health Care Conference and Expo and the National Health, Wellness and Prevention Congress
May 8-10, 2006, at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco

22. WorldatWork Total Rewards Conference & Exhibition 2006
May 7-10, 2006, at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California

23. HRO World Annual Conference
April 26-27, 2006, at the New York Hilton & Towers, New York City

24. 2006 Human Resource Planning Society Annual Global Conference
April 23-26, 2006, at the JW Marriott Starr Pass Resort & Spa in Tucson, Arizona.

25. The 2006 World Health Care Congress
April 17-19, 2006, at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, D.C.

26. International Association for Human Resource Information Management
April 9-12, 2006

27. Lawson Software Conference and User Exchange (CUE) 2006
April 9-11, 2006

28. The Conference Board 2006 Senior Human Resources Executive Conference–Strategic Workforce Management and Growth
April 6-7, 2006

Similar Documents

Related Topics




 Workforce Blogs

The Business of Management
Workforce Management editor John Hollon analyzes and comments on business, management and the art of leading a workforce.

Workforce Washington
Washington staff writer Mark Schoeff Jr. provides an insider’s insights to the workings of our nation’s capital from the workforce management perspective.

Global Work Watch
Staff writer Ed Frauenheim blogs about how companies worldwide marshal and manage their workers.






Copyright © 1995-2008 Crain Communications Inc.
All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Statement