Rock started his career in 1951 as a securities analyst in New York City, and then joined the corporate finance department of
Hayden, Stone & Company in New York, where he focused on raising money for small high-technology companies. In 1957, when the "
traitorous eight" left
Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory, Rock was the one who helped them find a place to go: he convinced
Sherman Fairchild to start
Fairchild Semiconductor. In 1961, he moved to California. Along with
Thomas J. Davis Jr., he formed the San Francisco venture capital firm Davis & Rock. In 1968,
Robert Noyce,
Gordon Moore, and another
Fairchild employee named
Andy Grove, were ready to start a new company,
Intel. Noyce contacted his good friend Rock, with whom he used to hike and camp. Rock described how Intel started: Bob [Noyce] just called me on the phone. We'd been friends for a long time.… Documents? There was practically nothing. Noyce's reputation was good enough. We put out a page-and-a-half little circular, but I'd raised the money even before people saw it. Intel was incorporated in
Mountain View, California, on July 18, 1968, by chemist
Gordon E. Moore (known for "
Moore's law"),
Robert Noyce, a physicist and co-inventor of the
integrated circuit. Of the original 500,000 shares, Noyce held 245,000, Moore 245,000, and Rock 10,000; all at $1 per share. Rock raised $2.5 million of
convertible debentures from a limited group of private investors in one day. Rock became Intel's first chairman. In 1978,
Mike Markkula of
Apple Computer connected Rock with
Steve Jobs and
Steve Wozniak. Rock bought 640,000 shares of Apple Computer and became a long-time director of the company. == Venture capital ==