Bill Tarkulich
Lexington, Massachusetts
bill@tarkulich.com
781.799.2930
linkedin.com/in/tarkulich
BILL TARKULICH
Lexington, Massachusetts
bill@tarkulich.com
781.799.2930
linkedin.com/in/tarkulich
Accomplished global product manager with strong execution skills.
Leads small teams to rapidly bring products to market without reliance on
complex corporate processes. Agile
Product Owner for multiple development projects.
Identifies product requirements by building strong customer and partner
relationships. Customer advocate
throughout product lifecycle.
Senior Product Manager, HP
Hyper Converged Systems
2013-2016
A Hyper Converged system is a software-defined infrastructure with tightly
coupled compute, networking, storage and virtualization components.
It reduces IT manpower requirements, unifies policies, provides optimized
scalability and is virtualization-ready.
Responsible for VMware-based
Hyper Converged, Intel/Linux based HC250/380 virtualized systems for the
enterprise market. Introduced scalable, software-defined products in the early
adopter product phase.
·
Met aggressive six month
introduction goal by leveraging standard products, driving sales, NPI activities
and Agile development in parallel
·
Developed product inter-line
positioning, value proposition and presentations
·
Supported new worldwide
200-person sales force close business
·
Drove quarterly product
refresh release
Senior Product Manager, HP
EVO:RAIL
2013-2014
Led worldwide introduction and
lifecycle management for the hyper converged EVO:RAIL system to target small and
mid-sized businesses. Partnered with
VMware.
·
Engaged a core team of 20
people to bring EVO:RAIL to market with minimal corporate support within six
months
·
Addressed lackluster sales by
decisively making feature and price adjustments within two months, which
increased sales tenfold
·
Continually engaged 10
cross-functional organizations to eliminate scope and schedule creep
·
Managed technical, services
and sales opportunities with VMware counterparts
Senior Product Manager, HP
OneView Converged System Mgt.
2012-2013
Original member of a new, autonomous Converged System group of 200 people.
Drove requirements, evangelized and oversaw lifecycle of an efficient,
automated management interface to drive down customer operational expense.
·
Identified usability and
manageability improvements as a key revenue opportunity and developed business
case
·
As the Agile Product Owner,
created user stories, use cases and personas.
Participated in scrum sessions, developer demos and backlog
rationalization.
·
Initiated two usability (UX)
studies
Bill Tarkulich
Page Two
Product Manager, HP Superdome
Servers
2011-2012
Responsible for HP Superdome
hardware business, including requirements, investments and lifecycle management.
·
Reduced Oracle-centric
customer defections by 20% by extending support program length to ten years,
slowing customer defections
·
Rationalized feature
backlog/requirements
·
Collaborated with product
managers to provide product migration paths
Program Manager, HP Utility
Computing
2008-2011
Led pay-per-use and Instant
Capacity programs, consisting of engineering, operational IT, and HP Financial
Services offerings, to provide alternate customer financing options.
·
Delivered $17M annual revenue
with a team of six
·
Stabilized operational billing
and revenue forecast fluctuation, as high as 30%, by driving robust automated
utilization data audits and remediation
·
Increased customer
satisfaction in over 100 accounts
·
Led regular reviews of account
performance which resulted in rapid resolution of customer billing concerns
·
Drove market re-pricing,
contract renewals and conversions to preserve installed base
Sales Program Manager, HP High Performance
Computing
2004-2007
·
Established server trade in
value to drive 50% of all sales revenue
·
Executed regional promotions
to drive 15% add-on options revenue
Project Manager, Compaq
1998-2004
·
Led teams of 3 to 10 people to
architect, manufacture, sell and deliver over 40 customer-specified systems.
·
Drove a team of three to
integrate and deliver $10M of Oracle 9i RAC solutions annually
Software Development, Apollo Computer & Others
Early career
·
Led a team of 15 software
engineers to deliver two releases per year
·
Wrote diagnostic and device
driver software for servers
·
Developed database
applications for non-profit, educational and distribution markets
·
Analyzed market segment
performance and recommended adjustments to sales strategy
EDUCATION
Master of Business
Administration, Northeastern University, MA
Bachelor of Science,
Electrical Engineering Rochester Institute of Technology, NY
CERTIFICATIONS
Pragmatic Marketing Level III
Certification
Last Updated: August, 2016
My Wish for a Better World
Saying hello! We’re all in this together, and acknowledging one another is a custom we must not lose.
By David Roach | January 13, 2013 , The Boston Globe
WHEN I WAS A BOY, my father would take my brother and me for a swim in the lake in the town where I now live. Then it was a farming community of about 3,500. Today it is a commuting community of about 10,500. From my boyhood spot in the back seat of the two-toned 1957 Chevy, I noticed how my father would wave to other drivers we passed as we made our way to the lake. Most would respond with a simple wave. Others would raise the four fingers curved around the top of the steering wheel as their acknowledgment; some would raise a finger to the brim of their baseball hat.
When we’d turn the corner at the top of the long hill that led to the lake, we would pass a farmhouse where an elderly couple would be sitting on the porch. Make sure you wave, my father would say. And we did, and they would always wave back.
Now, I travel other country roads in that same town as I take my evening walk. I do my best to sustain the custom I learned as a boy but must confess to mixed results. Although most drivers return my wave, many appear to do so begrudgingly, seeming almost embarrassed, as if they’re not quite sure what to make of this guy whom they do not know walking down the road and waving to them.
I wonder what has happened to cause the devolution of our local custom. It seems no longer enough to acknowledge as we pass that we share the same fine evening, the still unspoiled tree-lined roads, the clear, crisp autumn air. It seems rather this acknowledgment is something for which we must qualify — that it is no longer enough to realize that time is short and we might as well be kind.
My first teaching job was in Battery Park High School in rural South Carolina. My students were the poorest in the state, among the poorest in the country, but they were rich in tradition and spirit. One such tradition came from the deep resources of their faith and their music — the oratorical device call-and-response, in which the preacher declares and the congregation responds. At Battery, teachers would begin an early class by declaring, “It’s a great day,” and the students would respond: “And a righteous morning.” I, too, would do this on occasion, on particularly fine Carolina mornings, and when I did, the response was always bounteous, always joyful.
Now I teach a seminar to undergraduates on education policy on Tuesday evenings. I am always the first to arrive for the opening class of the semester so that I can say hi or hello or good evening to each student as he or she enters the room. They are caught off guard, as if they would much prefer that I focus on shuffling papers on the table in front of me, head down, waiting for the bell to ring.
There are no bells on Tuesday evenings. Resourcefully, my students conjure up awkward responses, knowing that manners require something in return and that I am, after all, the guy who will one day issue them a grade. By the third or fourth week, however, something shifts and they become the first to say hi. I see this as a hopeful sign.
I believe it is not good if we become so self-absorbed and harried that we fail to acknowledge one another’s presence — our common interest in a good day, a fine sunset, and a better tomorrow. We are on this journey together, and the journey is short. While we are on it, we should say hi to our fellow travelers.
It is a great day and a righteous morning.
My Passions
White Mountain National Forest - U. S. Forest Service
Other Stuff in My Life
Rochester Institute of Technology
My Ancestral Village, Zboj and Nova Sedlica, Slovakia