Michael McCafferty
Michael McCafferty | |
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Born |
September 7, 1942 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Alma mater | Mount St. Mary's University |
Occupation |
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Website |
dblm |
Michael McCafferty (born September 7, 1942) is an American entrepreneur, inventor known as the "Father of CRM", and programmer most well known for his work in presiding over Technitrol, Inc.'s subsidiary called Eastern Data Processing and for creating the software product TeleMagic. After graduating from college, he went on to work at IBM, which lead to him getting employment at Technitrol, Inc. After an unsuccessful service called Product & Area Locator (PAL), he filed for bankruptcy on March 17, 1983, and went on to create TeleMagic under his company Remote Control International, which was met with positive reception both in terms of sales figures as well as customer reception. This success led the company and the software it created to eventually be purchased by The Sage Group. During his college years, he worked on entrepreneurial endeavors, including a birthday cake delivery service, a restaurant, and advertising. He currently works as a mentor to other businesspeople.
Personal life
Michael McCafferty was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on September 7, 1942 to Verna M. McCafferty and Charles F. McCafferty. He is the second oldest of six siblings. He has two children and currently resides in Del Mar, California.
Career and education
In his early life, McCafferty worked on repairing bicycles with his brother, and in high school, he worked at a gas station. He was accepted into Mount St. Mary's College in September 1960. He went into multiple career paths during college, including selling advertising space to local retailers on desk bottlers, birthday cake sales and delivery, and a restaurant called "The Purple Onion." McCafferty was employed by IBM as a salesperson shortly after he graduated from college. He became a top producer at IBM, and he sold computers in multiple states, including Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, and Maryland. He used his career at IBM to learn more about computers and running a business. Later in his career, he left his job at IBM and began working on his own business ventures.
Eastern Data Processing
McCafferty got a job as a solo programmer at Technitrol, Inc. in Philadelphia programming on an IBM 1130 computer. The company's president hired him due to his own lack of experience with programming, McCafferty's background with IBM and his understanding of the programming language FORTRAN. After a year employed as programmer and manager of the Data Processing department, he and the President of Technitrol decided to form a company in 1968 called Eastern Data Processing (EDP) as a subsidiary of Technitrol when McCafferty was only 26. The goal of this company was to provide computerized payroll services to businesses.[1] It was intended to compete with a similar business called "Automatic Data Processing". McCafferty was the company's President, and he had a 20% share in the company. In the first six months of the company's operation, the company saw $400,000 in losses, which was due in part to the fact that much of its business was not related to its intended business structure. As such, the company did not have a product to sell. Nevertheless, the Technitrol President allowed him to continue working with the company, though with a new vision for it. McCafferty then spent the next six years building a profitable business. In spite of these problems that the business faced early on, the combined success of it and other subsidiaries of Technitrol contributed to the parent company's success.[1] The company experienced a 125% increase in sales between 1972 and 1973, an increase from $4.7 million to $10.6 million. Profits increased from $107,000 to $466,000.[1] When his employer, E. Stuart Eichert, died, McCafferty learned that his promised shares in the company were not set in writing, and thus he lost his ownership in the company. He quit immediately. The first prototype for EDP ran on an IBM 360 Model 30 with IBM 2311 disk storage drives and two Tape Drives, and was programmed in COBOL. During seven years, it grew to support three-shift work-days and was used for thousands of companies’ payrolls.
After EDP
When he left EDP, he went to work in Chicago, Illinois to work for Robert F. White & Company as the company's Vice President of Operations. In his new position, he was tasked with converting physical punch cards to tape/disk payroll files. After working there for 2 years, he moved to San Diego strictly for the weather.
TeleMagic
Michael filed for Chapter 7 personal bankruptcy on March 17, 1983. Following his filing, Michael went on to work on and invent the earliest known contact management software product for the PC called TeleMagic, which was made for use by salespeople and entrepreneurs so that they can keep track of customers. [2] The product was marketed by his company, Remote Control International. The software was originally intended to be sold to telemarketers, but eventually became popular for more sales markets. The program could be used in conjunction with other pieces of computer software, including word processors and accounting. The program was originally made for DOS in 1985, and later in 1987, versions of the program were released on Unix and Apple Macintosh systems. While it was originally intended for use in the United States, it was expanded to other regions in 1988, including Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, and others. Remote Control International was generally successful, and ranked 79th and 348th on Inc. 500's list of the Fastest Growing Companies in 1991 and 1992, respectively.[3][4] The company was later purchased by The Sage Group in 1992, which allowed Michael to live comfortably. After its purchase, TeleMagic was made available for Microsoft Windows in 1993, and Remote Control International was renamed to TeleMagic Inc. in 1994, It did not have anymore software releases on later platforms after this. This is believed to be due in part to Sage's financial issues following the purchase of the company, and the fact that TeleMagic under Sage was posting losses at about one million pounds per year.[5] On February 14, 2007, the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California accepted TeleMagic-related software and related items in order to preserve them.[6] The product received praise around its release as well as well beyond its lifespan. The Baltimore Sun's Patrick Rossello called TeleMagic the "hot software for this effort and is reasonably priced at many software stores."[7] including from a writer for Forbes.com who stated that TeleMagic felt that "had seen more robust solutions 20 years ago in TeleMagic, than were readily available on the Salesforce.com platform."[8] Other websites such as CMO.com.au gave TeleMagic credit for "marketers to consolidate, manage and track customer information."[9] Not all reception was positive however; according to The Guardian's Guy Clapperton, Jane Harrad-Roberts, the consultant director of the company Marketing Projects, chose to drop TeleMagic after The Sage Group purchased it, feeling that they had made it a worse product.[10]
External links
References
- 1 2 3 "Company By Letter". Company Histories. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ↑ Rich Bohn. "Independent CRM Analyst". SellMoreNow. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
- ↑ Inc. Staff. "The 1991 Inc. 500 Index". Inc. 500. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ↑ Inc. Staff. "The 1992 Inc. 500 Index". Inc. 500. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ↑ Amoore, Topaz (1993-07-22). "Profit warning sends Sage shares tumbling: Computer company falls victim to exchange gag on analysts' briefings". The Independent. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ↑ "TeleMagic packaged software". Retrieved 2015-03-22.
- ↑ Rossello, Patrick (1992-01-13). "Telemarketing reaches out to touch its clientele". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ↑ Chesebrough, Bruce (2013-11-21). "6 Cool Things I Learned At Dreamforce13: New Tools To Accelerate Your Sales and Improve Customer Service". Forbes. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ↑ Martinico, Joe (2013-03-26). "The State of Marketing Automation". CMO: Marketing, Technology, Leadership. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ↑ Clapperton, Guy (2002-09-26). "Bargain data deals". The Guardian. Retrieved 2015-03-12.