Skyhook CEO Jeff Glass on Growth, Google, & the Glitz of Indoor Location

As an entrepreneur and a venture capitalist, Jeff Glass has seen his share of challenging companies. Now he faces perhaps his greatest task, as he leads Boston mobile-tech stalwart Skyhook through the perilous world of location technology.

Back in December, Glass took the reins from longtime Skyhook CEO Ted Morgan, the company’s co-founder (who remains on the board). At the time, there was some speculation that Glass was being brought in to turn Skyhook around and sell it. But Glass told me then that “there is absolutely no mandate at all to sell … we’ll continue to invest and grow until it makes sense to do otherwise.”

Translation: We’ll sell when we’re good and ready.

I met up with Glass (pictured) recently to see how things are going after six months on the job. My first impression: he seems more comfortable in the CEO role than as a VC. Glass was previously chief executive at m-Qube, the mobile content-delivery company that was bought by VeriSign in 2006. Most recently, he was a managing director with Bain Capital Ventures for six years, serving on a bunch of boards, including Blip.tv, BuyWithMe, and Linkable Networks.

And long before that, Glass grew up in a working-class neighborhood in Brooklyn, where he says he got “mugged in elementary school and stabbed in junior high.” His family’s cars were stolen on several occasions and their house was broken into. By comparison, this whole tech-executive thing must be roses.

Skyhook got started in 2003 and became a pioneer in the field of location positioning for mobile devices. The company’s technology uses a combination of GPS, Wi-Fi, and cellular signals to determine where a device is, and its software has been deployed in millions of devices, including iPhones.

Things got tough for the company around 2010, when Apple and Google began to push their own in-house location software into new devices. That summer, Skyhook filed a pair of lawsuits against Google alleging patent infringement and anticompetitive business practices. The legal battle is ongoing, with the first patent trial not even set to begin until 2014 at the earliest.

One of the first things Glass did as new CEO was to institute a culture change in the management team: Don’t talk about the Google case. Not with the press, not with partners, not with each other; let the lawyers handle it. “It’s cordoned off. We don’t talk about it. We talk about customers,” he says. “We can’t build the future of location intelligence by fixating on the past.”

The other thing he did, which is typical of incoming CEOs, was go on a world tour to meet all of Skyhook’s customers, competitors, and potential partners. That was necessary to “develop instincts about the business,” he says, which you can’t get by just serving on a board or working with the management team.

A lot of CEO decisions are made on “instinct based on experience,” he says. “It has to be grounded in a base.”

Although Skyhook still has a ways to go,

Author: Gregory T. Huang

Greg is a veteran journalist who has covered a wide range of science, technology, and business. As former editor in chief, he overaw daily news, features, and events across Xconomy's national network. Before joining Xconomy, he was a features editor at New Scientist magazine, where he edited and wrote articles on physics, technology, and neuroscience. Previously he was senior writer at Technology Review, where he reported on emerging technologies, R&D, and advances in computing, robotics, and applied physics. His writing has also appeared in Wired, Nature, and The Atlantic Monthly’s website. He was named a New York Times professional fellow in 2003. Greg is the co-author of Guanxi (Simon & Schuster, 2006), about Microsoft in China and the global competition for talent and technology. Before becoming a journalist, he did research at MIT’s Artificial Intelligence Lab. He has published 20 papers in scientific journals and conferences and spoken on innovation at Adobe, Amazon, eBay, Google, HP, Microsoft, Yahoo, and other organizations. He has a Master’s and Ph.D. in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT, and a B.S. in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.