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SAN DIEGO - Teradata (NYSE: TDC) has appointed Scot Rogers as its new Chief Administrative Officer, effective June 12, according to a company press release. In this newly created position, Rogers will oversee the company’s worldwide legal and human resources operations. The appointment comes as the company, currently valued at $2.1 billion, maintains a solid financial health score according to InvestingPro analysis, despite its shares declining about 33% over the past six months.
Rogers joins Teradata from F5, Inc., where he served as Executive Vice President and General Counsel since January 2014. During his tenure at F5, which began in 2005, he managed legal, compliance, and government affairs functions across global operations and also served as interim Chief Human Resources Officer.
In his new role, Rogers will report directly to Teradata President and CEO Steve McMillan and serve as a strategic advisor on the executive leadership team. His responsibilities include driving efficiency between legal and human resources departments while overseeing corporate governance, compliance, talent strategy and culture initiatives.
"With rapidly evolving AI governance regulations and intense competition for top-tier AI talent, Scot’s expertise in the legal and HR functions is mission-critical," McMillan stated in the announcement.
Prior to his time at F5, Rogers worked as General Counsel for Xpediate Consulting, a healthcare technology company, and spent eight years in private practice as a commercial litigator. He holds a J.D. from Southern Methodist University’s Dedman School of Law and is a graduate of the University of Texas.
Teradata, which describes itself as a provider of cloud analytics and data platforms for AI, indicated that Rogers’ appointment aligns with the company’s focus on establishing itself in the hybrid cloud platform market for enterprise AI applications. According to InvestingPro’s analysis, the company appears undervalued based on its Fair Value estimate, suggesting potential upside for investors interested in the growing enterprise AI market.
In other recent news, Teradata Corporation reported its Q1 2025 earnings, revealing a mixed financial performance. The company’s earnings per share (EPS) exceeded expectations at $0.66, surpassing the forecast of $0.57. However, the revenue fell short, totaling $418 million against a projected $425.42 million, marking a 10% year-over-year decline. Despite the earnings beat, Northland analysts downgraded Teradata’s stock from Outperform to Market Perform, citing concerns over annual recurring revenue (ARR) and the impact of general artificial intelligence (GenAI) on analytics spending. The price target was significantly reduced to $21 from $37. Teradata anticipates ARR stabilization in the second half of 2025, with cloud ARR growing 16% year-over-year, reflecting strong demand. The company also announced new executive appointments and a strategic focus on AI, emphasizing the importance of trusted data in AI success. Looking forward, Teradata projects total ARR growth in Q4 2025 and expects cloud ARR to grow by 14-18% for the year.
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