Michelangelo "Mike" Volpi (born 13 December 1966) is an Italian-American businessman and venture capitalist.
He worked as an engineer, eventually becoming chief strategy officer at Cisco Systems during the company’s growth era, acquiring over 70 companies in less than five years.[1][2]
Volpi was born in Milan, Italy. When he was five, his family moved to Tokyo, Japan, where he lived until he moved to the United States in 1984 to attend college.
He earned a BS in mechanical engineering (1984-1988) and an MS in manufacturing systems engineering (1988-1989) from Stanford University.[3] After working at HP for several years, returned to Stanford to earn an M.B.A. from the Graduate School of Business (1992-1994).[3]
Career
HP
Volpi began his career at Hewlett Packard's optoelectronics division in 1989 where he was both in engineering and marketing.[1]
While at HP, he met his future wife Toni C. Cupal.[4]
Cisco
Volpi joined Cisco Systems in 1994 in the nascent business development group. He was promoted to leading acquisitions at Cisco starting in April 1996. As chief strategy officer he led corporate strategy, business development, and strategic alliances. Their acquisition strategy of Volpi and his team at Cisco is used as model for technology mergers and acquisitions.[5] he was promoted to the chief strategy office working for CEO John Chambers until 2000. Some press speculated he was heir apparent to Chambers.[6][7]
Moving into an operational role as a senior vice president and general manager, he led the routing and switching teams, then co-led the routing and service provider group with Prem Jain until 2007.[8]
A few months later, he was appointed CEO of Joost,[10][11][7][12][13][14] an Internet startup focused on online TV which was founded by Skype founders Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis.[15]
In September 2009, a lawsuit was filed against Volpi by Skype’s founders in conjunction with the proposed divestiture of Skype from eBay.[16] The lawsuit was dropped in November 2009.[17]