Brad is a founding partner of Ignition. He invests in software, infrastructure, and consumer companies. Brad represents Ignition as director on the boards of Seven, SourceLabs, ice.com, infiLearn, Avvo, and Illumita. Prior
to founding Ignition, Brad is best known as an industry pioneer who
built the Microsoft Windows franchise and led Microsoft's Internet
turnaround. During his nine-year tenure at Microsoft, he was a senior
vice president and me...
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Brad is a founding partner of Ignition. He invests in software, infrastructure, and consumer companies.
Brad represents Ignition as director on the boards of
Seven,
SourceLabs,
ice.com,
infiLearn,
Avvo, and
Illumita.
Prior
to founding Ignition, Brad is best known as an industry pioneer who
built the Microsoft Windows franchise and led Microsoft's Internet
turnaround. During his nine-year tenure at Microsoft, he was a senior
vice president and member of Microsoft's nine-member Executive
Committee. He was responsible for driving all aspects of the Windows
business from 1990 through 1995, including establishing the vision and
strategy, and executing on product marketing and development. In five
years, he grew Windows from a $50 million business to over $3.5
billion. He was also responsible for the MS-DOS business during that
period. He was named PC Magazine's Person of the Year in 1995 for his
leadership of Windows 95.
From 1994 through 1997, Brad led the
Internet effort at Microsoft and was responsible for its Internet
platform, as well as the Developer Tools Division and the Developer
Relations Group. As part of the Internet efforts, Brad's
responsibilities included Internet Explorer versions 1-4, which he grew
from 0% share to over 60%, Outlook Express, Java, Commerce Server, and
Commercial Internet Server.
In 1996 and 1997, he also led the
Microsoft Office division, was responsible for over $6 billion in
revenue and managed over 5,000 people. In 1998-1999, Brad worked
part-time at Microsoft, primarily as a strategic consultant for
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.
At Microsoft, Brad led numerous
acquisitions and licensing deals, including directing the acquisitions
of eShop and Dimension X and negotiating acquisitions of Hotmail and
WebTV. He also directed the licensing deals with AOL (Internet
Explorer), Sun Microsystems, Symantec, Central Point and Spyglass.
Prior
to Microsoft, Brad's career involved running product development at
Borland International; running product development at Silicon Valley
startup called Analytica, which was later acquired by Borland; product
development at Apple Computer; and computer science research at SRI
International.
He received a Bachelor of Science degree magna
cum laude in Computer Science from Brown University, and a Master of
Science degree in Computer Science from the University of Toronto.
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