At SpringSource, Schott led the company’s rebranding efforts from Interface21 to SpringSource, as well as the complete overhaul of the company’s marketing, a difficult feat in a start-up with such impressive engineering chops as SpringSource has.

Disclosure: As noted above, I am an adviser to MuleSource.

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Schott is a good fit for engineering-heavy MuleSource. He has technical chops, and a wealth of marketing and operations experience. I’m biased, as I’m an adviser to the company, but I’m also a good friend of Rosenberg, MuleSource’s former CEO and co-founder.

Schott joins MuleSource at a good time. The company has delivered 100 percent year-over-year revenue growth and now counts more than 2,000 enterprise deployments at major enterprises like Wal-Mart Stores. The company just completed its best quarter ever, and it named MySQL sales executive Mark Burton to its board of directors.

Schott may familiar to those who follow the sometimes-incestuous open-source talent pool. That’s because Schott joins MuleSource from SpringSource, where he was senior vice president of marketing.

MuleSource, the company behind the top open-source enterprise service bus (ESB) and a leading open-source service-oriented architecture (SOA) vendor, has been without a chief executive for some time, having lost the services of CNET blogger Dave Rosenberg in September. On Monday, the company announced the appointment of Greg Schott as its new CEO.

Prior to joining SpringSource, Schott had served as senior vice president of marketing and vice president of corporate development at Agile Software, which Oracle acquired in 2007.

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