T. J. Rodgers

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Thurman John Rodgers, better known as T.J. Rodgers, is the founder and CEO of Cypress Semiconductor. He is known for his public relations acumen, his brash personality, and strong advocacy of laissez-faire capitalism.

He received his bachelor's degree from Dartmouth College in 1970, graduating as salutatorian with majors in chemistry and physics. He received his master's degree (1973) and Ph.D. (1975) in electrical engineering from Stanford University. While pursuing his PhD. degree, Rodgers invented the VMOS process technology which he later licensed to American Microsystems Inc.. He founded Cypress Semiconductor in 1982.

Rodgers is an avid jogger and wine enthusiast. He is a prominent supporter of several charities including Second Harvest Food Bank, and serves as an alumni trustee on the Dartmouth College Board of Trustees.

[edit] The "Nun Episode"

Rodgers made headlines in 1996 when Sister Doris Gormley, the Director of Corporate Social Responsibility for The Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia, sent him a form letter encouraging him to hire women and minorities on the Cypress board. He replied with a long letter defending a pure meritocracy in terms of hiring practices.[1] The exchange sparked debate about political correctness and racial/gender preferences in business.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Rodgers, T.J. (1996-05-23). Profits Vs. PC A Silicon Valley CEO says no to boardroom quotas--on moral grounds.. Reason magazine. Retrieved on 2008-02-25. “[…] Thank you for your letter criticizing the lack of racial and gender diversity of Cypress's Board of Directors. I received the same letter from you last year. I will reiterate the management arguments opposing your position. Then I will provide the philosophical basis behind our rejection of the operating principles espoused in your letter, which we believe to be not only unsound, but even immoral, by a definition of that term I will present. […]”
  • No-Excuses Management: Proven Systems for Starting Fast, Growing Quickly, and Surviving Hard Times, by T.J. Rodgers, William Taylor and Rick Foreman (1993), Currency, ISBN 0-385-42604-6

[edit] External links