Irwin Federman

Irwin Federman (born 1936) is an American businessman, philanthropist and General Partner of U.S. Venture Partners.

Irwin Federman
Born1936 (age 8384)
NationalityUnited States
EducationB.S. Brooklyn College
OccupationBusinessman
Known forPresident of Monolithic Memories
General Partner of U.S. Venture Partners
Spouse(s)Shiela Federman (until death)
Concepcion Socarras
ChildrenFour with Shiela Federman
(Alex Federman, Carolyn Federman, Eric Federman and Jamie Greenberg); three step-children with Socarras including Nick Woodman

Biography

Federman was born to a Jewish family[1] in 1936[2] and graduated with a B.S. in Economics from Brooklyn College.[3] After college, he was awarded the Forbes Gold Medal for attaining the highest grade in California on his CPA exam[3][4] and then worked as an accountant in New York and California.[3] He then went on to serve as CFO of three startup companies the last of which was the troubled semiconductor manufacturer Monolithic Memories (MMI).[3] Irwin was appointed MMI's President, the first non-engineer CEO in the semiconductor industry, and he presided over its successful turn around.[3] Instead of laying workers off, he required that all workers to take one unpaid day off every other week, effectively cutting the payroll by 10% but preserving everyone's job: the policy actually boosted morale as workers bonded over the shared sacrifice; managers came into work on their off days; and everyone was more careful with their expenses.[5] In 1980, MMI went public. In 1987, in a $442 million stock swap, MMI was merged with Advanced Micro Devices[6] to become the world's largest integrated circuit manufacturer.[7] Federman was appointed Vice Chairman of AMD.[3][7] In 1988, he served as Managing Director of investment banking firm Dillon, Read & Co.[4] In 1990, he joined early-stage venture capital firm, U.S. Venture Partners,[4] where he served as General Partner.[3] He previously served on the Boards of Directors of SanDisk, Checkpoint Software Technologies and Mellanox, Inc.[3]

Philanthropy and awards

Federman served two terms as Chairman of the U.S. Semiconductor Industry Association;[8] he served on the Board of Directors of the National Venture Capital Association, and served two terms on the Dean's Advisory Board of the Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara [3] Federman received Torch of Liberty Award from the Anti-Defamation League and the Brotherhood Award from the Silicon Valley Conference for Community and Justice. In 2004, Federman was inducted into Junior Achievement's Silicon Valley Hall of Fame. In 2008, he received the International Business Forum's Special Achievement Award. He serves as a trustee of San Francisco Ballet, Brooklyn College, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.[4] He was also awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Engineering Science from Santa Clara University[3][4] and the Exemplary Community Leadership Award from the Silicon Valley Conference of Christians and Jews (now FACES).[4]

Personal life

His first wife was Sheila Federman with whom he had four children; she died in 1987.[4][9] In 1992, he remarried to Concepcion Socarras,[4] the former wife of Dean Woodman and mother of three children including Nick Woodman, the founder of GoPro.[10][11][12]

gollark: Also, everyone far enough in the past was probably horrible in some way.
gollark: What "parody of Job"?
gollark: Idea: deploy apiotemporohazards to wipe out everyone in the past who had now-distasteful political/ethical/sociological views.
gollark: Was he significantly more racist/etc. than *other* people at the time? I'd assume so somewhat.
gollark: In Spanish, it's the word for "black",even, IIRC.

References

  1. The Jewish Star: "Recapturing kotel led to a spiritual renewal" By Dovid Margolin May 25, 2017
  2. Businessweek: "Irwin Federman" retrieved May 26, 2014
  3. Santa Clara University Leavey School of Business: "Irwin Federman: General Partner, U.S. Venture Partners retrieved May 26, 2014
  4. ACG Silicon Valley: "Irwin Federman, U.S. Venture Partners" Archived 2014-05-27 at the Wayback Machine retrieved May 26, 2014
  5. Inside Bay Area: "Cassidy: Attention, CEOs: Here's proof that layoffs aren't always the best solution" by Mike Cassidy Archived 2014-05-29 at the Wayback Machine June 19, 2009
  6. Los Angeles Times: "Synergy of Contrasting Personalities Behind Chip Merger" by DONNA K. H. WALTERS May 04, 1987
  7. Los Angeles Times: "Monolithic Will Combine With Advanced Micro: $422-Million Stock Swap Will Create World's Biggest Integrated Circuit Maker" by NANCY RIVERA BROOKS May 01, 1987
  8. Los Angeles Times: "U.S. Semiconductor Firms Plan R&D Pool" by OSWALD JOHNSTON March 05, 1987
  9. New York Times: "Jaime Federman Is Married to Philip Greenberg" October 27, 1991
  10. Wall Street Journal: "How Family Ties Helped Nick Woodman Make GoPro Click" By Lizette Chapman June 20, 2013 | "The two-time entrepreneur had already raised money for one of his startups and...was well-connected to Silicon Valley players. With dad Dean Woodman, who was a founding partner at what became investment bank Robertson Stephens, and stepdad U.S. Venture Partners General Partner Irwin Federman"
  11. New York Social Diary Archived 2014-10-06 at the Wayback Machine retrieved May 26, 2014
  12. Explore San Francisco: "Bay Area Billionaires 2014" retrieved May 26, 2014
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