Sol Trujillo Explained

Sol Trujillo
Birth Name:Solomon Dennis Trujillo
Birth Date:17 November 1951
Birth Place:Cheyenne, Wyoming, U.S.
Education:University of Wyoming (BBA, MBA)

Solomon Dennis "Sol" Trujillo (born November 17, 1951) is an American businessman, global media-communications and technology executive.[1] He has served as the CEO of Telstra, US West, and Orange S.A., and has held executive positions in United States Federal government and state governments.

Trujillo served as a trade policy advisor to both the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations.[2]

Personal life

Trujillo was born in Cheyenne, Wyoming to Solomon and Theresa (née Lujan) Trujillo.[3] Trujillo attended Cheyenne's East High School and the University of Wyoming, where he earned his Bachelor of Business degree (BBus) and an MBA.[4]

In 1973, Trujillo married Corine (née Fresquez) Trujillo. He currently lives with his wife in Dana Point, California, which is between San Diego and Los Angeles, and he has three adult daughters.

Trujillo was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Melbourne in 2000.[5]

Trujillo serves on several corporate boards in the US, Europe and China, including WPP,[6] Target, Promerica Bank and Silk Road Technologies.[7]

Career

AT&T/Mountain Bell/US West

Trujillo began his business career in 1974 as an economic forecaster in the Mountain Bell division of AT&T. At 32, Trujillo was selected State Vice-President, serving as chief executive of Mountain Bell's operations in New Mexico, making him the youngest officer in the history of AT&T.<ref> NHEA Executive of the Year . Soto, Rose . Hispanic Professional . 1995 . 2 . 1 . 14.

In 1996, Trujillo was named president of US West. He advanced to president and CEO in 1998, becoming America's first native-born Latino to serve as CEO of a Fortune 200 company.[8]

Trujillo stepped down as CEO of US West in 2002, following the company's merger with Qwest Communications CEO Joe Nacchio, citing differences in vision between the two. During his time at the company, Trujillo was credited with shifting US West's reputation as the "smallest local phone network" into one focused on high-speed Internet and other technology, such as Voice over IP.[9]

Graviton

In November 2000, Trujillo became chairman and CEO of Graviton, a La Jolla-based startup that produced wirelessly-connected sensor technology for public and private applications.[10] He was recruited by director Brook Byers, of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. In addition to Kleiner Perkins, other investors in the startup, which raised more than $60 million, included Qualcomm, Siemens, Royal Dutch/Shell GroupIn-Q-Tel, and Sun Microsystems.[11] [12]

Trujillo left the company shortly before its sale to Xsilogy, another wireless sensor and monitoring company, for an undisclosed sum.[13] [14]

Orange S.A.

After two years as a member of the Orange S.A. board of directors, Trujillo was tapped to serve as CEO of the company in 2003. He was the first American to lead a CAC 40 company.

At Orange, Trujillo pursued, "an aggressive growth strategy," to combat the large debt load that he inherited.[15] [16] This clashed with the business direction of state-owned France Telecom, Orange's parent, which eventually bought out minority shareholders and absorbed the company.[17]

Trujillo stepped down as CEO of Orange in March 2004, having "accomplished his mandate," and returning to the US. Under his leadership, Orange added five million new customers and grew its revenue profit margins by 10 and 7 percent, respectively.

Telstra

Trujillo was appointed Chief Executive Officer of Telstra Communications, Australia's largest telecommunications and media company, on July 1, 2005.[18] Amid news of his appointment, The Economist named the position "Australia's toughest corporate job," as Trujillo's mandate was to prepare the firm for Australia's largest public offering in history.[19] The firm, formerly Telecom Australia, was originally state-owned, but saw a minority stake sold off between 1997 and 1999, raising about A$30 billion. Approximately 51.8 percent of the company remained at the time of Trujillo's appointment, which was successfully concluded for A$15.5 billion in 2006.

Telstra's share price had underperformed due to poorly-calculated bids during the tenure of the firm's previous CEO, Ziggy Switkowski, including the purchase of Hong Kong mobile communications operator CSL and the attempted purchase of John Fairfax Holdings, a large Australian newspaper. The state-run telecom business was described as "lumbering," and falling behind its competition prior to its complete privatization, as its fixed-line business was undercut by its rivals internet and mobile services.[20] [21]

Following his appointment, Trujillo announced a five-year turnaround plan based on "principles" to make the company more responsive to shareholder concerns.[22] In addition to trying to streamlining the company's systems and paring down staff, Trujillo sought to upgrade aging networks and systems.[23] This led to the deployment of a nationwide 3G, 850 MHz mobile Internet to replace the then-current CDMA mobile network.[24] The network, built between November 2005 and September 2006, launched in October 2006. The largest and fastest network in the world, the network doubled the volume of total data traffic carried on all of Telstra's wireless networks.[25] After three years on the job, Trujillo was named "CEO of the Year" by Australian Telecom Magazine in recognition of his achievements in the privatization and transformation of Telstra.[26]

Despite its successes, Telstra repeatedly ran into regulatory issues as it tried to grow. In August 2006, a regulatory dispute forced Telstra to abandon a project to build a high-speed fiber-optic network in the country's five largest following a disagreement over how much the company could charge its competitors access to the network. Conscious of his duty to shareholders, Trujillo threatened not to build the network: "My duty is to our shareholders—including 1.6m ordinary Australians. I will only invest where I can earn an economic return."

After a high-profile bid, the company was removed from the bidding process to build a national high-speed broadband network by the Rudd Government.[27] [28] [29] In February 2009, Trujillo announced he would stand down as Telstra's CEO and return to the United States.[30] He was replaced as CEO by David Thodey, formerly head of the government affairs for the company, who insisted that he planned to see out the end of Trujillo's five-year plan.[31] [32]

Trujillo is recognized as a combative CEO who frequently locked horns with Australia's government, but was pivotal in shifting Telstra's position from a government-run monopoly to a more nimble, competitive company.[33] [34]

Unlockd

Trujillo joined a team of directors at Australian mobile phone startup Unlockd in July 2016. The startup, which raised $12 million in Series A funding, partners with telecommunications companies to display advertisements on consumers' devices in exchange for a discount on their monthly bill.[35] [36]

Awards and recognition

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wilson Center Experts . Wilson Center . April 16, 2015 . Wilson Center.
  2. Web site: Solomon Trujillo . Stanford University . April 16, 2015 . StanfordCenter on Longevity.
  3. Web site: Say it isn't Sol - and we won't . The Sydney Morning Herald . May 16, 2007 . April 12, 2015.
  4. Lessons of Leadership . April 12, 2015 . LATINO Magazine . 2012 . Fall 2012.
  5. Web site: UW Profiles -- Sol Trujillo. University of Wyoming. February 22, 2017.
  6. Web site: WPP Leadership. WPP. August 11, 2017.
  7. News: WPP dials up Trujillo for its board . Lee . Julian . October 13, 2010 . The Sydney Morning Herald . May 14, 2017.
  8. News: How Latinos power the American economy. Cisneros. Henry. March 13, 2016. The Wall Street Journal. January 1, 2017.
  9. News: US West CEO Trujillo to resign. Borland. John. January 2, 2002. CNET. January 4, 2017.
  10. Web site: Solomon D. Trujillo, Former Head of US West, Named Chief Executive Officer of graviton . Business Wire . November 15, 2000 .
  11. News: Graviton receives $35 million. Kawamoto. Dawn. January 2, 2002. CNET. February 2, 2017.
  12. News: Building a wireless nervous system. Gilbert. Alorie. May 12, 2004. CNET. January 28, 2017 .
  13. Web site: Company Overview of Xsilogy, Inc.. February 22, 2017. Bloomberg. February 22, 2017.
  14. News: Tiny Wireless Sensors Are Poised for Market. Prince. Marcello. July 1, 2003. Wall Street Journal. January 31, 2017.
  15. News: Orange Hands Top Job to Trujillo Among Turmoil. Delaney. Kevin. February 14, 2003. January 18, 2017. The Wall Street Journal.
  16. News: Ex-Chief of US West to Lead Australian Telephone Giant. Arnold. Wayne. June 10, 2005. The New York Times. January 10, 2017.
  17. News: Orange SA Chief Executive Resigns. Delaney. Kevin. March 31, 2004. The Wall Street Journal. January 12, 2017.
  18. News: AAP . Australian Associated Press . Trujillo named as new Telstra CEO . . June 9, 2005 . . June 4, 2008.
  19. News: A wise move? . June 23, 2003 . The Economist . January 24, 2017.
  20. News: So long Sol: Trujillo leaves Telstra. O'Sullivan. Matt. February 26, 2009. Farm Weekly . May 14, 2017.
  21. News: Calling Canberra. May 11, 2006. The Economist. December 25, 2016.
  22. News: Telstra's Trujillo says transformation is about principles. Rossi. Sandra. March 27, 2008. Computer World. February 22, 2017.
  23. News: Mood music. November 9, 2006. The Economist. February 10, 2017.
  24. News: Telstra to slash tech costs under review. Ferguson. Ian. November 14, 2005. ZD Net . January 16, 2017.
  25. News: Telstra to make Next G biggest, fastest in world. Barker. Gary. February 14, 2007. The Age . February 5, 2017.
  26. Web site: The 8th Annual Media, Entertainment & Telecommunication Awards Announced. July 15, 2008 . NewsArticles.Au .
  27. https://web.archive.org/web/20090131072929/http://www.zdnet.com.au/insight/communications/soa/Is-Sol-Trujillo-about-to-leave-Telstra-/0,139023754,339294597,00.htm zdnet article
  28. http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/business/story/0,28124,24945099-5013584,00.html The Australian
  29. News: Australia's Telstra Names New Chief Amid Frayed Government Relations. McFarland. Lyndal. May 11, 2009. The Wall Street Journal. January 25, 2017.
  30. O'Sullivan, Matt: Trujillo to leave Telstra in June, The Age, 26 February 2009.
  31. Bingemann, Mitchell: Sol Trujillo departs for US ahead of schedule, The Australian, 19 May 2009.
  32. News: Telstra Picks CEO, Chairman. McFarland. Lyndal. May 7, 2009. The Wall Street Journal. January 25, 2017.
  33. News: Why Trujillo was the best CEO for Telstra. Braue. David. June 23, 2011. ZD Net. February 2, 2017 .
  34. News: Former Telstra boss Sol Trujillo to join board of tech start-up Unlockd . Adhikari . Supratim. July 18, 2016. The Australian . February 22, 2017 .
  35. News: Unlockd: the mobile disrupter that lured Sol Trujillo back to corporate Australia. Kruger. Colin. July 19, 2016. December 16, 2016. Sydney Morning Herald.
  36. News: Unlockd raises $12M to offer ad-funded discounts on your cell phone bill. Ha. Anthony. April 25, 2016. Tech Crunch. January 5, 2017.
  37. News: Whittier College graduation speaker announced. April 20, 2017. Whittier Daily News. May 16, 2017.
  38. Web site: Honorary Degrees Whittier College. www.whittier.edu. 2020-02-27.
  39. Web site: Sol Trujillo accepting USHLI National Hispanic Hero Award speech in Chicago 02.16.13. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211215/OnwrybVps-U . 2021-12-15 . live. February 22, 2013. YouTube. May 15, 2017.
  40. News: NACD Directorship 100: Directors . nacdonline.org . May 15, 2017 . NACD Online.
  41. News: The 8th Annual Media, Entertainment & Telecommunication Awards Announced. Newsarticles.net . May 15, 2017 . News Articles.
  42. Web site: Honorary Degrees, University Medals and Distinguished Service Awards 2001-pres.. 2002. Colorado University. May 15, 2017.
  43. News: A Better Chance Presents Corporate Recognition Award to U S West Chairman Solomon D. Trujillo.. June 28, 2000. thefreelibrary.com. May 15, 2017.
  44. Web site: University of Wyoming Honorary Degree Recipients. 2000. University of Wyoming. May 15, 2017.
  45. News: President Clinton Presents Ronald H. Brown Foundation 1999 Corporate Bridge Builder Award to U S WEST's Sol Trujillo - Trujillo Honored for Creating Opportunities for Women and Minorities. November 12, 1999. Diversitybusiness.com. May 15, 2017.
  46. News: Presidente Clinton honra a Sol Trujillo de US West . 12. El Hispanic News . November 17, 1999 .