Board of Directors
David Campbell
VP, Principal Investments, Goldman Sachs
David Campbell has held a number of senior roles within the Goldman Sachs Technology Group for over ten years, and was elected Technology Fellow in 2002. In 2004 he joined Goldman's Principal Investment Area to invest in early stage technology companies. The technology venture investment group maintains close relationships with the firm's technology group, leveraging its insights and expertise as a key part of its strategy to invest in and build outstanding enterprise technology companies. David started his career working on a number of industry and military projects, focused on operating systems and real-time control systems. In 1990 he moved to Japan to work in the Fujitsu research and development labs as an engineer on the VP2000 Unix super computer project. In 1994 he joined Goldman Sachs in Japan, managing systems infrastructure across Asia for both trading and back office divisions. He then moved to New York as global systems architect and manager of global storage working on key projects, including: Goldman Sachs' mobile computing and "thin building" strategies; the XP and Linux platforms; and a complete storage infrastructure re-architecture based on tiered storage, SANs, NAS, new backup technologies, and CAS. David graduated from Queensland University in Australia with a BE in Electrical Engineering and a BA in Japanese.
Raj Gollamudi
Co-founder, BlueStream Ventures
Raj Gollamudi is a co-founder of BlueStream Ventures and has worked in or with venture-backed technology startups for the past fourteen years. Prior to founding BlueStream, Raj was a research analyst at Thomas Weisel Partners where he led the firm’s efforts in internet infrastructure software. Raj also spent more than six years in software research and development positions, including five years at Sun Microsystems. Raj holds an MBA from the Wharton School, at the University of Pennsylvania, as well as an MS from Clemson University and a BE from the Birla Institute of Technology and Science.
Gail Hamilton
Former Executive VP, Symantec
Gail Hamilton most recently led a team of over 2,000 employees worldwide at Symantec and had P&L responsibility for the global services and support business. Previously Gail led all of Symantec’s consumer and enterprise product development and support. During her five years at Symantec, Gail helped steer the company through an aggressive acquisition strategy. In 2003, Information Security Magazine recognized Gail as one of the "20 Women Luminaries" shaping the security industry. Gail has over 20 years of experience growing leading technology and services businesses in the enterprise market. She has extensive management experience at Compaq and HP, as well as Microtec Research. She is a member of the board of directors of Ixia (a provider of IP network testing solutions) and Washington Group International (an engineering and construction services company). Gail also serves as a board member of the Institute of Space and Science of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. Gail received both a BSEE from the University of Colorado and an MSEE from Stanford University.
Tim Lucas
President and CEO, Surgient
Tim is responsible for the overall leadership and direction of Surgient, including all aspects of strategy and execution. Previously Tim was Surgient's CFO and Vice President of, Services where he was responsible for Surgient’s financial operations as well as
Surgient’s professional services organization. Tim brings to the Company more than 18 years of public and
private company experience in both financial and operational leadership
roles, including a successful IPO. Prior to joining Surgient, Tim was
the finance executive for a $200MM business unit of SAS Institute, the
largest private software company in the world. Tim has also previously
served as VP of Consulting and as Senior Director of Operations at Red
Hat, where he reorganized the consulting practice and founded the company's global professional services practice, changing the delivery approach from technology-centric to one focused on client needs. Prior to Red Hat, Tim was VP and CFO at Akopia, where he managed finance and operations for the provider of open source e-commerce software and services from the start-up phase through a period of rapid growth, leading to its acquisition by Red Hat. Lucas also brings experience in leading a company through an initial public offering, as he successfully did for Petroglyph Energy. Tim has a
bachelor of business administration, with distinction, from the
University of Oklahoma, and is a CPA.
Bruce MacNaughton
Partner, Crosslink Capital
Bruce MacNaughton joined Crosslink in 2001 and focuses on software and data center hardware venture investing activities and strategies. Prior to joining Crosslink, Bruce was CTO and VP Engineering at iCopyright. Before that, Bruce was general manager of Internet Operations at Microsoft, where his team developed, deployed and supported the architectures for such services as MSN, Passport/Hotmail, Microsoft Communities and MSN Messenger. From 1997 to 1998, Bruce was director of communications strategy at Microsoft, where he created the Microsoft Passport initiative. There, he focused on the company's community, chat, buddy list, and e-mail product strategies. Previously, Bruce spent 20 years at CompuServe, most recently as Vice President and Chief Architect. Bruce serves on the boards of AmberPoint, Cendura and Strix Systems. Bruce holds a BFA from Southern Methodist University.