The rest of the 100 (in alphabetical order): René Hartner, Micron Technology

As vice-president of corporate development at Micron, René Hartner’s job is to turn “intelligence accelerated”, a term coined by Micron to indicate the company’s intention to harness artificial intelligence and machine learning, building tools the company can use.

These tools include M&A, corporate venture capital, creating joint ventures, licensing, strategic partnerships, strategy and ecosystem development.

Hartner said: “I started my career in CVC with the creation of the SanDisk Venture Fund in 2012 [before its acquisition by Western Digital in 2016]. In my current role at Micron, started in October 2018, I am responsible for our global M&A, post-merger integration, our artificial intelligence and machine learning transformation initiative as well as for our new $100m fund that focuses on artificial intelligence and machine learning.”

Hartner has concentrated on so-called competence clusters. “A very similar asset and technology that reached a B-round maturity stage, for example, can be priced five-times higher in Silicon Valley versus Munich.

“On the flip side if a business model requires you to raise several hundred million dollars, there are only three cities in the world where you can do this – Silicon Valley in San Francisco, Shanghai and Beijing. Historically it was just Silicon Valley, hence we can expect a gravitational shift of leading tech companies towards China.”

Although not authorised to publish results from specific investments or exits, he said: “Our biggest success had been to shape our own thinking, strategy, roadmap and approach to the enterprise storage appliance industry.”

James Mawson

James Mawson is founder and chief executive of Global Venturing.