Sirius CEO Najim Makes Good On His Community Commitment
December 05, 2006 2:03 PM ET
When Harvey Najim, president and CEO of Sirius Computer Solutions (VARBusiness 500 No. 78), accepted the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2006 VARBusiness 500 Awards in June, he talked about doing good with his success and giving back to his community. Now he has big news that is helping him making that happen.
The recent announcement that Sirius Computer Solutions has finalized a recapitalization and equity partnership agreement with Thoma Cressey Equity Partners might have initially led to thoughts of Najim's selling out and retiring. Not so. In fact, Najim explains he is using the majority of his proceeds from the transaction to set up the Harvey Najim Foundation to support children and education in the greater San Antonio area.
Najim is hiring an executive director to oversee the foundation; he will serve on its board, along with his two daughters, to guide the foundation's efforts to improve the community where he lives and works. His goal is to ultimately build a foundation with about $200 million to $250 million in the next four to five years.
"I've always talked about becoming a service leader instead of a business leader, and I want my claim to fame to be that I was a philanthropist," Najim says.
He also wants to make it clear that he is sticking around to lead Sirius to the next level.
"There will be no management changes as a result, and Sirius will continue to operate as an independent entity," says Najim, adding that he remains the single largest shareholder in the company and that Sirius management still maintains "significant ownership" in the company.
But amid a market ripe for consolidation, Najim says he saw the writing on the wall and wanted access to the capital.
"We're aggressively going to grow Sirius and thinking of acquisitions as we speak," he says.
For Thoma Cressey, this will be the third major investment in companies in the IBM iServer arena in recent months.
|
|
Five Companies That Dropped The Ball This Week For the week ending Feb. 10, CRN looks at five companies that were either asleep at the wheel or just didn't make good decisions. |
|
|
Five Companies That Came To Win This Week For the week ending Feb. 10, CRN looks at five companies that brought their 'A' game and made moves to beat out competitors |
|
|
10 Challenges That HP Wants Partners To Tackle Right Now CRN speaks with HP's business unit chiefs to get a sense of where they'd like partners to focus in the coming year, as well as how CEO Meg Whitman is making a difference. |
