Five facts about Oracles co-CEOs Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia

September 22 (Reuters) – Oracle called Insiders Clay Magouuyrk and Mike Sicilia on Monday, as a joint CEOS, and has been replaced by Safra Catz, which has been under the direction of the cloud services provider for 11 years.
Catz will remain as the Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors with the company.
Here are the five things you need to know about Oracle’s new chefs Magouyrk and Sicilia:
* 39 -year -old Magouuyrk has a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the University of Memphis. His first professional experience includes his engineering roles in Hilton Hotels and then Amazon.
* In 2014, Oracle joined the Amazon Web Services, where he played high -level cloud leadership roles in the Amazon and cloud section Amazon Web Services.
* Magouuyrk is the founding member of Oracle’s cloud engineering team and is effective in designing and implementing Oracle Cloud infrastructure.
* In addition, Oracle’s global data center operations significantly expand.
* As part of the new role, Magouyrk will be given stock options to buy a share of $ 250 million.
* 54 -year -old Sicilia has a bachelor’s degree in computer science at the University of Saint Joseph in Pennsylvania. It continues to be actively busy with the Alma material, serves at the Father Judge High School Friends Council and supports donation attempts.
* Sicilia participated in Oracle with the acquisition of the 2008 project management software provider Primavera Systems and played the latest technology official. He started his career in 1993 as a Software Engineer.
* The latest retail, financial services, health services, communication, engineering and construction, including enterprises was the president of Oracle Industries.
* Sicilia is also actively involved in charitable efforts by leading Oracle’s partnerships with governments and organizations around the world in areas such as Covid-19 intervention and health innovation.
* As part of the new role, Sicilia will be given stock options to buy a $ 100 million stock. (Reporting by the Critical Lamp and Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru;


