Pat Gelsinger Takes Intel CEO Post
January 13, 2021
Bob Swan will remain in CEO role until February 15
Intel expects to exceed its previously communicated guidance for fourth-quarter
2020 revenue and earnings per share (EPS). Full fourth-quarter results will be
released Jan. 21, 2021, as scheduled.
The company has made strong progress on its 7nm process technology and will
provide an update on its Jan. 21 earnings call.
Intel has appointed 40-year technology industry leader Pat Gelsinger as its new
chief executive officer, effective Feb. 15, 2021. Gelsinger will also join the
Intel board of directors upon assuming the role. He will succeed Bob Swan, who
will remain CEO until Feb. 15.
Today’s announcement is unrelated to Intel’s 2020 financial performance. Intel
expects its fourth-quarter 2020 revenue and EPS to exceed its prior guidance
provided on Oct. 22, 2020. In addition, the company has made strong progress on
its 7nm process technology and plans on providing an update when it reports its
full fourth-quarter and full-year 2020 results as previously scheduled on Jan.
21, 2021.

Gelsinger is a highly respected CEO and industry veteran with more than four
decades of technology and leadership experience, including 30 years at Intel
where he began his career.
“Pat is a proven technology leader with a distinguished track record of
innovation, talent development, and a deep knowledge of Intel. He will continue
a values-based cultural leadership approach with a hyper focus on operational
execution,” said Omar Ishrak, independent chairman of the Intel board. “After
careful consideration, the board concluded that now is the right time to make
this leadership change to draw on Pat’s technology and engineering expertise
during this critical period of transformation at Intel. The board is confident
that Pat, together with the rest of the leadership team, will ensure strong
execution of Intel’s strategy to build on its product leadership and take
advantage of the significant opportunities ahead as it continues to transform
from a CPU to a multi-architecture XPU company.”
“I am thrilled to rejoin and lead Intel forward at this important time for the
company, our industry and our nation,” said Gelsinger. “Having begun my career
at Intel and learned at the feet of Grove, Noyce and Moore, it’s my privilege
and honor to return in this leadership capacity. I have tremendous regard for
the company’s rich history and powerful technologies that have created the
world’s digital infrastructure. I believe Intel has significant potential to
continue to reshape the future of technology and look forward to working with
the incredibly talented global Intel team to accelerate innovation and create
value for our customers and shareholders.”
“The board and I deeply appreciate Bob Swan for his leadership and significant
contributions through this period of transformation for Intel,” continued Ishrak.
“Under his leadership, Intel has made significant progress on its strategy to
transform into a multi-architecture XPU company to capitalize on market shifts
and extend Intel’s reach into fast-growing markets. Bob has also been
instrumental in reenergizing the company’s culture to drive better execution of
our product and innovation roadmap. He leaves Intel in a strong strategic and
financial position, and we thank him for his ongoing guidance as he works with
Pat to ensure the leadership transition is seamless.”
“My
goal over the past two years has been to position Intel for a new era of
distributed intelligence, improving execution to strengthen our core CPU
franchise and extending our reach to accelerate growth,” said Swan. “With
significant progress made across those priorities, we’re now at the right
juncture to make this transition to the next leader of Intel. I am fully
supportive of the board’s selection of Pat and have great confidence that, under
his leadership and the rest of the management team, Intel will continue to lead
the market as one of the world’s most influential technology companies.”
Most recently, Gelsinger served as the CEO of VMware since 2012, where he
significantly transformed the company into a recognized global leader in cloud
infrastructure, enterprise mobility and cyber security, almost tripling the
company’s annual revenues. Prior to joining VMware, Gelsinger was president and
chief operating officer of EMC Information Infrastructure Products at EMC,
overseeing engineering and operations for information storage, data computing,
backup and recovery, RSA security and enterprise solutions. Before joining EMC,
he spent 30 years at Intel, becoming the company’s first chief technology
officer and driving the creation of key industry technologies such as USB and
Wi-Fi. He was the architect of the original 80486 processor, led 14 different
microprocessor programs and played key roles in the Core and Xeon families. |