Leadership Overview
Veeam has 4 executives leading key functions including marketing, finance, technology, and strategy.
Driven by innovation, Veeam is dedicated to providing robust backup, recovery, and data management solutions, ensuring continuous availability and protection against modern threats for cloud, virtual, physical, SaaS, and Kubernetes environments.
Driven by innovation, Veeam is dedicated to providing robust backup, recovery, and data management solutions, ensuring continuous availability and protection against modern threats for cloud, virtual, physical, SaaS, and Kubernetes environments.
Leadership Roles at Veeam
Dustin Driggs - Chief Financial Officer
Dustin Driggs, the Chief Financial Officer at Veeam, manages all financial operations and strategic fiscal planning. Overseeing budgeting, forecasting, and financial reporting, Driggs ensures the company's sustained growth and profitability. This critical role involves optimizing financial performance to support Veeam's expansion in backup, recovery, and data management solutions. By guiding investment strategies, Dustin Driggs reinforces the company's ability to deliver a powerful platform for diverse environments including Cloud, Virtual, Physical, SaaS, and Kubernetes. The Chief Financial Officer's objective is to maintain financial integrity and drive shareholder value. Driggs's financial acumen supports Veeam's mission to provide customers with confidence in their data protection and availability.

Allison Cerra - Chief Marketing Officer
Allison Cerra, the Chief Marketing Officer at Veeam, directs all global marketing initiatives. Overseeing brand strategy and demand generation, Cerra ensures Veeam's leadership in Modern Data Protection is communicated effectively across all channels. This role involves driving market awareness for Veeam's single platform that supports Cloud, Virtual, Physical, SaaS, and Kubernetes environments. By crafting compelling campaigns, Allison Cerra strengthens Veeam's position against ransomware and other threats. The Chief Marketing Officer's focus remains on empowering customers with simple, flexible, reliable, and powerful data management solutions. Cerra's leadership ensures consistent messaging that highlights the confidence Veeam customers gain in their data availability and protection.

Takaaki Kumazawa - Field Chief Technology Officer (Security)
Takaaki Kumazawa, the Field Chief Technology Officer (Security) at Veeam, provides expert technical guidance on security aspects of data protection. Overseeing the integration of advanced security measures within Veeam's platform, Kumazawa ensures robust defense against ransomware and malicious actors. This role focuses on translating complex security challenges into actionable strategies for customers utilizing Cloud, Virtual, Physical, SaaS, and Kubernetes environments. By championing best practices, Takaaki Kumazawa enhances the reliability and power of Veeam's solutions. The Field Chief Technology Officer (Security) is instrumental in maintaining customer confidence through superior data protection. Kumazawa's technical leadership solidifies Veeam's reputation for delivering simple, flexible, and powerful data management.
Emilee Tellez - Veeam Strategy & Community Field Chief Technology Officer
Emilee Tellez, the Veeam Strategy & Community Field Chief Technology Officer at Veeam, drives strategic technology initiatives and fosters community engagement. Overseeing the development and communication of Veeam's technology roadmap, Tellez ensures alignment with market needs for Modern Data Protection. This position involves shaping the future of Veeam's platform across Cloud, Virtual, Physical, SaaS, and Kubernetes environments. By building strong community ties, Emilee Tellez amplifies Veeam's impact and customer success. The Veeam Strategy & Community Field Chief Technology Officer's focus is on empowering users with the most simple, flexible, reliable, and powerful solutions. Tellez's strategic vision and community leadership reinforce Veeam's commitment to customer confidence and data availability.
Explore Leadership Teams in Software
Quest Software creates technology and solutions that build the foundation for enterprise AI. Focused on data management and governance, identity security and platform modernization, Quest helps organizations address their most pressing challenges and make the promise of AI a reality. Around the globe, more than 130,000 companies including over 90% of the Fortune 500 count on Quest Software.
Company Leadership TP
CJ
TT
DD
NetApp, Inc. provides software, systems, and services to manage and store computer data worldwide. It offers flash; flash arrays that support data management; hybrid arrays to deploy the speed of flash storage; hybrid cloud; ONTAP cloud storage data management service; NetApp cloud sync hybrid data management Software as a Service; NetApp private storage for cloud; and AltaVault cloud-integrated solutions. The company also provides ONTAP storage operating system for data protection and security; SANtricity storage operating system, which provides performance, reliability, and data protection for application-driven workloads; SolidFire element operating system; NetApp StorageGRID Webscale software that allows customers to store and manage massive amounts of data on premises and in the cloud; NetApp integrated data protection solutions; OnCommand management software and management integration tools; and FlexArray storage virtualization software. Further, it provides software and hardware maintenance, professional, and customer education and training services, as well as support solutions. The company serves energy, financial services, government, high technology, Internet, life sciences, healthcare services, manufacturing, media, entertainment, animation, video postproduction, and telecommunications sectors through a direct sales force and channel partners. NetApp, Inc. was founded in 1992 and is headquartered in Sunnyvale.
Company Leadership BS
MW
SR
Founded in 2008, Nasuni is a File Services Platform built for the Cloud. It consolidates network attached storage and file server silos in cloud storage, delivering infinite scale, built-in backup, global file sharing, and local file server performance. The company serves sectors such as manufacturing, construction, creative services, technology, pharmaceuticals, consumer goods, oil and gas, financial services, and public sector agencies. The company is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts.
Company Leadership SK

DW
The SCO Group (often referred to SCO and later called The TSG Group) was an American software company in existence from 2002 to 2012 that became known for owning Unix operating system assets that had belonged to the Santa Cruz Operation (the original SCO), including the UnixWare and OpenServer technologies, and then, under CEO Darl McBride, pursuing a series of high-profile legal battles known as the SCO-Linux controversies. The SCO Group began in 2002 with a renaming of Caldera International, accompanied by McBride becoming CEO and a major change in business strategy and direction. The SCO brand was re-emphasized and new releases of UnixWare and OpenServer came out. The company also attempted some initiatives in the e-commerce space with the SCOBiz and SCOx programs. In 2003, the SCO Group claimed that the increasingly popular free Linux operating system contained substantial amounts of Unix code that IBM had improperly put there. The SCOsource division was created to monetize the company's intellectual property by selling Unix license rights to use Linux. The SCO v. IBM lawsuit was filed, asking for billion-dollar damages and setting off one of the top technology battles in the history of the industry. By a year later, four additional lawsuits had been filed involving the company. Reaction to SCO's actions from the free and open source software community was intensely negative and the general IT industry was not enamored of the actions either. SCO soon became, as Businessweek headlined, "The Most Hated Company in Tech". SCO Group stock rose rapidly during 2003, but then SCOsource revenue became erratic and the stock began a long fall. Despite the industry's attention to the lawsuits, SCO continued to maintain a product focus as well, putting out a major new release of OpenServer that incorporated the UnixWare kernel inside it. SCO also made a major push in the burgeoning smartphones space, launching the Me Inc. platform for mobility services. But despite these actions, the company steadily lost money and ...
Company Leadership MR
RP
TE
RK