OBJECT DESIGN INC
DEF 14A, 1999-04-16
PREPACKAGED SOFTWARE
Previous: VULCAN VENTURES INC, SC 14D1/A, 1999-04-16
Next: MELLON BANK CREDIT CARD MASTER TRUST, 8-K, 1999-04-16




                                  SCHEDULE 14A
                                 (Rule 14a-101)
                     INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934


Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:
    [ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement
    [ ] Confidential,  For Use of the  Commission  Only (as  permitted  by Rule
        14a-6(e)(2))
    [X] Definitive Proxy  Statement
    [ ] Definitive  Additional Materials
    [ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12

                               Object Design, Inc.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                                 Not Applicable
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
    [X] No fee required.
    [ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
         1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
         2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
         3) Per unit  price or  other underlying  value of  transaction computed
            pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:*
         4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
         5) Total fee paid:
*Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was
determined.
    [ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials:

    [ ] Check  box if any part of  the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act
        Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was
        paid previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement
        number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.


        1) Amount Previously Paid:

        2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

        3) Filing Party:

        4) Date Filed:

<PAGE>

                               OBJECT DESIGN, INC.
                                  25 MALL ROAD
                         BURLINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS 01803
                                ----------------
                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                  MAY 26, 1999
                                ----------------
To the Stockholders of Object Design, Inc.:

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of stockholders of Object Design,
Inc. (the "Company")  will be held at the offices of the Company,  25 Mall Road,
Burlington,  Massachusetts 01803, on Wednesday, May 26, 1999, beginning at 10:00
A.M., local time, for the following purposes:

   1.    To consider and vote upon the election of two Class III Directors;

   2     To  consider  and vote upon a  proposal  to  ratify  the  adoption  and
         approval by the Board of Directors  of an  amendment  to the  Company's
         1996 Employee  Stock  Purchase Plan to increase the number of shares of
         Common Stock available for issuance thereunder by 200,000; and

   3.    To  transact  such  further  business as may  properly  come before the
         Meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof.

     The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on Wednesday,  April
7, 1999 as the record  date for the  determination  of the  stockholders  of the
Company  entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Meeting and any adjournments
or postponements thereof.  Accordingly, only stockholders of record on such date
are  entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Meeting or any  adjournments  or
postponements thereof.

                                             By Order of the Board of Directors,


                                             John D. Patterson, Jr.
                                             Secretary

Burlington, Massachusetts
April 23, 1999


                             YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT

The  Board  of  Directors  solicits  the  execution  and  prompt  return  of the
accompanying  proxy.  Please sign and return the enclosed proxy,  whether or not
you plan to attend the Meeting. If you attend the meeting,  you may withdraw any
proxy given by you and vote your shares in person.



<PAGE>



                               OBJECT DESIGN, INC.
                                  25 MALL ROAD
                         BURLINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS 01803
                                 (781) 674-5000
                                ----------------
                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                                ----------------
                         ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                  May 26, 1999

                    Proxy Solicitation, Voting and Revocation

     This Proxy Statement and the enclosed form of General  Information proxy is
furnished to the holders of Common Stock, $.001 par value per share (the "Common
Stock"),  of  Object  Design,  Inc.  (the  "Company")  in  connection  with  the
solicitation  by the Board of  Directors of the Company of proxies to be used at
the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the Company,  to be held at the offices of
the Company,  25 Mall Road,  Burlington,  Massachusetts  01803, at 10:00 A.M. on
Wednesday,  May  26,  1999,  and at any and all  adjournments  or  postponements
thereof (the "Annual Meeting"). When proxies are returned properly executed, the
shares   represented  will  be  voted  in  accordance  with  the   stockholders'
directions. Stockholders are encouraged to vote on the matters to be considered.
If no choice has been specified by a stockholder, however, the shares covered by
any executed proxy will be voted as recommended by management.  Any  stockholder
may revoke his proxy at any time before it has been exercised.

     This Proxy  Statement  and  proxies for use at the Annual  Meeting  will be
first mailed to  stockholders  on or about April 23, 1999.  Such proxies will be
solicited  chiefly  by  mail.  No  compensation  will be paid by any  person  in
connection with the solicitation of proxies.  Brokers,  banks and other nominees
will be  reimbursed  for  their  out-of-pocket  expenses  and  other  reasonable
clerical expenses  incurred in obtaining  instructions from beneficial owners of
the Common Stock. In addition to the solicitation by mail, special  solicitation
of proxies  may, in certain  instances,  be made  personally  or by telephone by
Directors,  officers and certain  employees of the Company.  It is expected that
the expense of such special  solicitation will be nominal. All expenses incurred
in connection with this solicitation will be borne by the Company.

                                   RECORD DATE

     The Board of  Directors  of the  Company has fixed the close of business on
Wednesday,  April  7,  1999 as the  record  date  for the  determination  of the
stockholders  of the  Company  entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual
Meeting and any adjournment  thereof.  Only  stockholders of record on such date
are  entitled  to  notice  of,  and to  vote  at,  the  Annual  Meeting  and any
adjournments or  postponements  thereof.  At the close of business on the record
date,  there were  issued and  outstanding  28,131,030  shares of the  Company's
Common Stock, entitled to cast 28,131,030 votes.

                         QUORUM AND TABULATION OF VOTES

     The  By-Laws of the  Company  provide  that a quorum at the Annual  Meeting
shall consist of a majority in interest of all stock issued and  outstanding and
entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting.  Shares of Common Stock represented by a
properly  signed  and  returned  proxy  will be treated as present at the Annual
Meeting for purposes of  determining a quorum.  In general,  votes withheld from
any nominee for election as Director,  abstentions  (if  applicable)  and broker
"non-votes"  (if  applicable) are counted as present or represented for purposes
of  determining  the presence or absence of a quorum for the Annual  Meeting.  A
"non-vote" occurs when a broker or nominee holding shares for a beneficial owner
votes on one proposal, but does not vote on another proposal because, in respect
of such other proposal, the broker or nominee does not have discretionary voting
power and has not received instructions from the beneficial owner.




<PAGE>
     The affirmative  vote of a plurality of the shares of Common Stock properly
cast at the Annual  Meeting will be necessary to elect each Class III  Director,
pursuant to Proposal One. Abstentions,  votes "withheld" from  Director-nominees
and broker  "non-votes"  will not be included in calculating the number of votes
cast on Proposal One, and, therefore,  will have no effect on the outcome of the
vote for such Proposal.

     The  affirmative  vote of a majority of the shares of Common Stock properly
cast at the Annual  Meeting  will be  necessary  to approve  Proposal  Two,  the
proposal to amend the Company's 1996 Employee  Stock Purchase Plan.  Abstentions
and broker  "non-votes"  will not be included in calculating the number of votes
cast on Proposal Two, and, therefore,  will have no effect on the outcome of the
vote for such Proposal.

     Votes will be tabulated by the Company's transfer agent,  EquiServe Limited
Partnership. The vote on each matter submitted to stockholders will be tabulated
separately.

                                  PROPOSAL ONE
                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The Board of  Directors  is  divided  into three  classes,  one of which is
elected each year at the annual meeting of stockholders for a three-year term of
office.  All  Directors  hold office until the date of the third annual  meeting
following  their  election and thereafter  until their  successor is elected and
qualified or until such director sooner dies,  resigns,  is removed,  or becomes
disqualified.  The terms of the Company's Class III Directors  (currently Robert
N.  Goldman and Kevin J. Burns) will  expire  immediately  following  the Annual
Meeting.  Class II Directors (currently Arthur J. Marks and Justin J. Perreault)
will serve until 2001, and Class I Directors  (currently Gerald B. Bay and David
A. Litwack) will serve until 2000.

     The Board of Directors has  nominated  Robert N. Goldman and Kevin J. Burns
for  re-election as Class III Directors of the Company.  If re-elected,  Messrs.
Goldman and Burns will serve until the annual meeting of stockholders to be held
in 2002,  and until  their  successors  have been duly  elected  and  qualified.
Messrs.  Goldman and Burns have agreed to serve if elected,  and the Company has
no reason to  believe  that  either  will be unable to serve.  In the event that
either Mr.  Goldman or Mr. Burns is unable or declines to serve as a Director at
the time of the Annual Meeting,  proxies will be voted for such other nominee as
is then designated by the Board of Directors.

                        DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

The following table sets forth certain information with respect to the executive
officers and Directors of the Company:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                Director   Term     
             Name                  Age                          Position                        Since      Expires    Class
             ----                  ---                          --------                        --------   -------    -----
<S>                               <C>   <C>                                                    <C>        <C>          <C>
Robert N. Goldman .............    49    Chairman of the Board of Directors                     1995       1999         III
Justin J. Perreault ...........    36    President and Chief Executive Officer, Director        1999       2001         II
Lacey P. Brandt ...............    41    Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer                  --------   --------   -----
Lawrence E. Alston, Jr ........    37    Vice President, Marketing                              --------   --------   -----
Kirk D. Bowman ................    33    Senior Vice President, Worldwide Sales and Services    --------   --------   -----
Brian W. Otis .................    40    Senior Vice President, Product Development             --------   --------   -----
Gerald B. Bay (1), (2) ........    59    Director                                               1988       2000         I
Kevin J. Burns (1).............    49    Director                                               1997       1999         III
David A. Litwack (2)...........    52    Director                                               1997       2000         I
Arthur J. Marks (1), (2).......    54    Director                                               1990       2001         II

- - ----------
 (1) Member of the Audit Committee
 (2) Member of the Compensation Committee

</TABLE>
                                       2
<PAGE>

    Mr. Goldman was elected Chairman of the Board of the Company and resigned as
President and Chief Executive  Officer in January 1999. He was the President and
Chief Executive Officer of the Company since he joined Object Design in November
1995 and a Director  of the  Company  since  August  1995.  Prior to joining the
Company,  Mr. Goldman was Chairman of Trinzic Corporation from 1992 to 1995. Mr.
Goldman  is a  member  of the  Board  of  Directors  of  Citrix  Systems,  Inc.,
Net.Genesis Corp., Parametric Technology Corporation and Systemsoft Corporation.

    Mr.  Perreault  was elected  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of the
Company in January  1999.  He was elected to the Board of  Directors in February
1999. He was the Executive  Vice  President and Chief  Operating  Officer of the
Company since November 1995.  Prior to joining the Company,  Mr. Perreault was a
Vice President with the Harvard Private Capital Group,  Inc., from 1992 to 1995.
From May 1995 to  December  1995,  he served on the  Board of  Directors  of the
Company as the  representative  of the Harvard Private  Capital Group,  Inc. Mr.
Perreault is a member of the Board of Directors of Kentek  Information  Systems,
Inc.

     Ms. Brandt has been the Chief Financial  Officer of the Company since April
1996.  Prior to joining the Company,  Ms.  Brandt served as Director of Finance,
Controller  and  Treasurer  of  International   Integration   Incorporated  from
September 1995 to April 1996.  Ms. Brandt was Director of Investor  Relations at
Proteon, Inc. from 1993 to September 1995.

    Mr. Alston has been the Vice President of Marketing of the Company since May
1998 and was Director of Product  Management  for the Company from November 1996
to May  1998,  and a Product  Manager  for the  Company  from  November  1993 to
November 1996.

    Mr.  Bowman has been Senior Vice  President of Worldwide  Sales and Services
for the  Company  since  July 1998 and Vice  President,  Worldwide  Sales of the
Company since April 1997. Prior to joining the Company,  Mr. Bowman was employed
in various management and sales positions at Parametric  Technology  Corporation
from 1990 to April 1997.

    Mr. Otis has been  Senior  Vice  President  of Product  Development  for the
Company since July 1998 and had served as Vice President  Professional  Services
of the Company from June 1995 to July 1998 and as a Consulting Manager,  Eastern
Region for the Company from 1993 to June 1995.

     Mr. Bay has been a Director of the Company since 1988.  Since 1980, Mr. Bay
has been a  Managing  Partner  of The Vista  Group.  Mr.  Bay  served as interim
President of the Company from August to November 1995.

     Mr. Burns has been a Director of the Company since October 1997.  Mr. Burns
has been Managing Principal of Lazard Technology  Partners since July 1998. From
1990 until July 1998, Mr. Burns was Chairman of the Board of INTERSOLV, Inc. Mr.
Burns was the Chief Executive Officer of INTERSOLV, Inc. from 1986 to 1996.

     Mr. Litwack has been a Director of the Company since  December 1997.  Since
May 1997,  Mr.  Litwack  has been  President  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of
SilverStream   Software,   Inc.  Mr.  Litwack  was  Vice  President  of  Product
Development  of Powersoft  Corporation  from 1988 until 1992, and then served as
President of Powersoft from 1992 until the company's  merger with Sybase Inc. in
December,  1994.  From the time of the merger  until May 1997,  Mr.  Litwack was
Executive Vice President of Sybase Inc.

     Mr. Marks has been a Director of the Company  since 1990.  Since 1984,  Mr.
Marks has been a General  Partner of New Enterprise  Associates.  Mr. Marks is a
Director of AMISYS Managed Care Systems,  Inc., Platinum Software,  Inc., NETRIX
Corporation, and Progress Software Corporation.

                                       3

<PAGE>

    Executive  officers  of the  Company  are  elected  annually by the Board of
Directors and serve until the first meeting of the Directors  following the next
annual meeting of stockholders  and until their  respective  successors are duly
elected and qualified. There are no family relationships among the Directors and
executive officers of the Company.

COMMITTEES AND MEETINGS OF THE BOARD

    During the fiscal year ended December 31, 1998 ("fiscal 1998"), the Board of
Directors met five times and acted by unanimous  written  consent five times. No
incumbent  Director attended fewer than 75% of the total number of meetings held
by the Board of Directors  and  Committees of the Board of Directors on which he
served.

    The Company has a Compensation Committee and an Audit Committee but does not
have a nominating committee or other committee performing similar functions. The
Compensation  Committee makes recommendations  concerning salaries and incentive
compensation for employees of and consultants to the Company and administers the
Company's  stock option plans,  its Employee  Stock Purchase Plan and the 401(k)
Plan.  The members of the  Compensation  Committee  currently  are Messrs.  Bay,
Litwack and Marks.  The  Compensation  Committee  held one meeting during fiscal
1998 and acted fourteen times by unanimous  written consent during the year. The
Audit  Committee  reviews the results and scope of the audit and other  services
provided  by the  Company's  independent  accountants.  The members of the Audit
Committee  currently are Messrs.  Bay, Burns and Marks.  The Audit Committee met
four times during fiscal 1998.


                REMUNERATION OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

    Each non-employee  Director of the Company receives $2,500 for each Board of
Directors  meeting attended and $500 for each Committee  meeting attended and is
reimbursed,  upon request,  for expenses  incurred in attending  such  meetings.
Directors  who are  employees of the Company are not paid any separate  fees for
serving as Directors.

    Prior to February 23, 1999,  non-employee Directors ("Outside Directors") of
the Company received  automatic formula grants of nonqualified  options pursuant
to the 1996 Stock Option Plan.  Each new Outside  Director  elected to the Board
was  automatically  granted,  upon his or her initial  election,  a nonqualified
option to purchase  25,000  shares of Common  Stock of the  Company,  vesting in
equal  installments  on the  first  three  anniversaries  of the  date of  grant
(provided  that he or she then  remained  a  Director  of the  Company).  No new
Directors were named during 1998, and, therefore,  no such grants were given out
under this plan.  Immediately  following each annual meeting of  stockholders of
the Company or special meeting in lieu thereof,  there was automatically granted
to each Outside Director re-elected at or remaining in office after such meeting
a fully-vested non-qualified option to purchase 5,000 shares of Common Stock. No
such option to  purchase  5,000  shares of Common  Stock would be granted to any
Outside  Director who at the time of the meeting held any  outstanding  unvested
option granted pursuant to the provisions of the 1996 Stock Option Plan,  unless
at least two annual meetings of stockholders of the Company or special  meetings
in lieu  thereof had taken place  between the closing of the  Company's  initial
public offering in July 1996 (or, if later,  the date of the initial election of
such Outside  Director) and the meeting  following  which such  automatic  grant
would occur. Each additional  nonqualified option granted to an Outside Director
pursuant  to this  provision  of the 1996 Stock  Option  Plan will expire on the
tenth  anniversary  of the  date of  grant.  The  exercise  price  of each  such
nonqualified  option was equal to the fair market  value of the Common  Stock on
the date the nonqualified option was granted.



                                       4

<PAGE>

    At a meeting of the Board of Directors  held on February 23, 1999, the Board
voted to  replace  the  compensation  arrangement  for  members  of the Board of
Directors  with regards to option grants.  Under the new plan,  which will be in
effect after February 23, 1999, each new Outside  Director  elected to the Board
will be automatically  granted, upon his or her initial election, a fully-vested
nonqualified option to purchase 15,000 shares of Common Stock of the Company. In
addition,  it was voted  that  immediately  following  each  annual  meeting  of
stockholders  of the  Company  or  special  meeting  in lieu  thereof,  there is
automatically  granted to each Outside  Director  re-elected  at or remaining in
office after such meeting a fully-vested  non-qualified option to purchase 5,000
shares of Common  Stock.  Each  additional  nonqualified  option  granted  to an
Outside  Director  pursuant to this provision of the 1996 Stock Option Plan will
expire on the tenth  anniversary of the date of grant. The exercise of each such
nonqualified  option will be equal to the fair market  value of the Common Stock
on the date the nonqualified option is granted.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

    Summary Compensation Table. The following table provides certain information
for the years ended  December 31, 1998,  1997 and 1996  concerning  compensation
paid to or accrued for the Company's Chief Executive  Officer and the other four
most  highly  compensated  executive  officers  who were  serving  as  executive
officers of the Company on December 31, 1998 and whose annual  compensation  for
fiscal year 1998  exceeded  $100,000.  The table also  includes  two  additional
individuals  who would have been included  among the Company's  four most highly
compensated  executive  officers,  but were not serving as executive officers of
the Company at the end of fiscal 1998.




                                       5

<PAGE>

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                Long Term
                                                                                               Compensation
                                            Annual Compensation                                   Awards
                                                                              Other Annual      Securities
                                                                                Compen-        Underlying
 Name and Principal Position               Year      Salary ($)    Bonus ($)  sation ($)(1)    Options (#)
 ---------------------------               ----      ----------    ---------  -------------   --------------
<S>                                       <C>         <C>           <C>          <C>           <C>
Robert N. Goldman ...........              1998        $210,000         --        --            300,000
    Chairman of the                        1997         200,000         --        --              --
    Board of Directors (2)                 1996         176,700      131,650      --              --


Justin J. Perreault .........              1998         168,000         --        --              --
     President and                         1997         160,000         --        --             50,000
     Chief Executive Officer (3)           1996         148,800       30,600      --             50,000


Lacey P. Brandt                            1998         120,750         --        --             20,000
    Chief Financial Officer                1997         115,000         --        --              --
    and Treasurer                          1996          70,086       15,000      --            130,000


Lawrence E. Alston, Jr.                    1998         108,000         --        --            130,000
    Vice President                         1997          95,283         --        --             10,000
    Marketing                              1996          76,680         --        --             22,500

Kirk D. Bowman .................           1998         223,242         --        --            100,000
    Senior Vice President, Worldwide       1997         177,138         --        --            250,000
    Sales and Services (4), (5)

Brian W. Otis ...............              1998         174,004         --        --            120,000
    Vice President,                        1997         140,330         --        --             25,000
    Professional Services (6)              1996         160,984       29,725      --            100,000

Gregory A. Baryza ..........               1998         129,653         --        --             20,000
    Vice President, Product                1997         114,157         --        --             20,000
    Development  (7)                       1996         107,470       19,044      --             65,000
</TABLE>

(1) Other annual  compensation  in the form of  perquisites  and other  personal
benefits  has been  omitted  because in each case the  aggregate  amount of such
perquisites  and other personal  benefits was less than $50,000 and  constituted
less than 10% of the executive's total annual salary and bonus.

(2) Mr.  Goldman was elected  Chairman of the Board of Directors and resigned as
President and Chief Executive Officer effective January 8, 1999.

(3) Mr. Perreault was elected  President and Chief Executive  Officer  effective
January 8, 1999.

(4)  Mr.  Bowman's  amount  shown  as  salary  for  1998  includes  $110,740  of
sales-based commissions.

(5) Reflects compensation from April 21, 1997 to December 31, 1997. Mr. Bowman's
employment  commenced on November 21, 1997. Mr. Bowman worked for the Company on
a contract basis from April 21, 1997 to November 21, 1997.

(6) Mr. Otis's amounts shown as salary for 1996, 1997 and 1998 include  $35,185,
$5,372 and $36,087 of sales-based commissions, respectively.

(7) Mr. Baryza resigned as Vice President,  Product Development,  effective July
31, 1998.

                                       6
<PAGE>



    Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year.  The following  table sets forth for each
of the Named Executive  Officers  certain  information  concerning stock options
granted by the Company during fiscal 1998.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                        OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

                       Individual Grants
     ---------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                Potential Realizable
                                              Percent of                                        Value at Assumed
                             Number of      Total Options                                       Annual Rate of
                             Securities       Granted to                                        Stock Price
                             Underlying       Employees       Exercise                          Appreciation
                              Options         in Fiscal        Price           Expiration       For Option Term (1)
                                                                                                -------------------
          Name            Granted (#)(2)       Year (3)      ($/sh) (4)           Date           5% ($)         10% ($)
          ----            ---------------      --------      ----------           ----           ------         -------
<S>                          <C>                <C>         <C>          <C>                <C>            <C>
Robert N. Goldman..........   275,000            7.75%       $ 6.13          April 1, 2008   $ 1,059,294    $ 2,684,460
                               25,000            0.70%         5.88           May 22, 2008        92,369        234,081
Justin J. Perreault........    50,000            1.41%         6.13          April 1, 2008       192,599        488,084
Lacey P. Brandt............    20,000            0.56%         6.63       February 6, 2008        83,329        211,171
Lawrence E. Alston Jr......   100,000            2.82%         7.13            May 6, 2008       448,087      1,135,542
                               30,000            0.85%         3.94       October 28, 2008        74,298        188,285
Kirk D. Bowman.............    40,000            1.13%         6.63       February 6, 2008       166,657        422,342
                               60,000            1.69%         5.88           May 22, 2008       221,685        561,794
Brian W. Otis..............    20,000            0.56%         6.63       February 6, 2008        83,329        211,171
                              100,000            2.82%         6.19          July 31, 2008       389,160        986,208
Gregory A. Baryza..........    20,000            0.56%         6.63       February 6, 2008        83,329        211,171

- ------------
</TABLE>

(1) The dollar amounts under these columns are the result of calculations at the
5% and 10% appreciation rates set by the Securities and Exchange Commission and,
therefore, are not intended to forecast possible future appreciation, if any, in
the price of the Common Stock.  No gain to the optionees is possible  without an
increase in the price of the Common Stock,  which will benefit all  stockholders
proportionately.

(2)  Represents  shares of Common Stock  issuable upon exercise of stock options
granted  under the 1996 Stock  Option Plan.  Such  options  were granted  during
fiscal  1998 and vest as  follows:  25% of the total  number of shares  one year
after their date of grant and an additional 6.25% at the end of each three-month
period thereafter until the options are fully vested.

(3) The  Company  granted to  employees  options to  purchase  an  aggregate  of
3,548,150 shares of Common Stock in fiscal 1998 pursuant to the following plans:
869,950  options  pursuant to the 1996 Stock Option Plan and  2,678,200  options
pursuant to the 1997 Nonqualified Stock Option Plan.

(4) All  options  were  granted  at  fair  market  value  as  determined  by the
Compensation Committee on the date of grant.


                                       7

<PAGE>

     Option Exercises and Fiscal Year-End Values. The following table sets forth
certain  information  concerning stock options  exercised during fiscal 1998 and
stock  options  held as of  December  31,  1998 by each of the  Named  Executive
Officers.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                 AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                        AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES

                                                                Number of Securities               Value of Unexercised
                                  Shares                       Underlying Unexercisable             in-the- Money
                                 Acquired                         Options At                        Options at Fiscal
                                    On          Value             Fiscal  Year-End                 Year-End ($), (2)
                                Exercise      Realized            ------- --------                                  
             Name                  (#)         ($)(1)     Exercisable (#) Unexercisable (#) Exercisable ($) Unexercisable ($)
             ----                ---------    ---------   --------------- ----------------- --------------- -----------------
<S>                              <C>         <C>             <C>            <C>              <C>             <C>
Robert N. Goldman .............     --            --            --           300,000          $   --          $ 154,750
Justin J. Perreault ...........     --            --          12,500          87,500              --             24,750
Lacey P. Brandt................     --            --          81,250          68,750            289,063         173,438
Lawrence E. Alston, Jr.........   3,375       $17,676         13,471         147,382             16,341         109,860
Kirk D. Bowman ................     --            --          93,750         256,250            105,469         220,481
Brian W. Otis .................     --            --          99,896         180,686            466,763         266,976
Gregory A. Baryza .............     --            --          99,813          70,187            513,391         197,609

</TABLE>

(1) Value is based on the difference between the fair market value of the Common
Stock on the date of exercise of the applicable option and the exercise price of
such option.  These values may never be realized.  Actual  gains,  if any,  will
depend on the value of the Common Stock on the date of the sale of the shares.

(2) Value is based on the last sale price of the Common  Stock ($6.63 per share)
on  December  31,  1998 as  reported  by the Nasdaq  National  Market,  less the
applicable  option exercise  price.  These values have not been and may never be
realized.  Actual  gains,  if any, on  exercise  will depend on the value of the
Common Stock on the date of the sale of the shares.

EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS

    In November, 1995, the Company executed employment agreements with Robert N.
Goldman and Justin J. Perreault (the "1995 Employment Agreements").  The Company
agreed to employ Messrs.  Goldman and Perreault as President and Chief Executive
Officer of the Company and Executive Vice President and Chief Operating  Officer
of the  Company  respectively,  at  annual  salaries  of at least  $190,000  and
$160,000 respectively.  Under these agreements, if the employment of the officer
was  terminated  by the Company for any reason  other than just cause,  death or
permanent disability, the agreements required the Company to continue to pay the
officer's salary for a period of twelve months, in the case of Mr. Goldman,  and
six months in the case of Mr. Perreault,  after such termination,  offset by any
amounts received by the officer from subsequent employment during such period.

    In November,  1998, the 1995 Employment Agreements for Messrs. Perreault and
Goldman were  amended and new  agreements  were  approved  for Ms.  Brandt,  Mr.
Bowman,  Mr. Otis and Mr.  Alston.  The agreement  entered into with Mr. Goldman
provided  for his salary for twelve  months and 100% of on target  bonus for the
year in which such termination  occurs to be paid by the Company in the event of
termination  for any  reason  other than  "cause"  as defined in the  agreement.
Furthermore, under the agreement, and only in the event of a "change of control"
as

                                       8

<PAGE>

defined in the agreement,  the Company would pay Mr. Goldman  twenty-four months
of  salary  and 100% of  target  bonus  for the year in which  such  termination
occurs,  and any  outstanding  options  held by Mr.  Goldman  would become fully
vested.  The Company  entered  into a similar  agreement  with Mr.  Perreault in
November,  1998 except that in the event of  termination  for reasons other than
"cause" he would  receive six months  salary and 100% of on target bonus for the
year in which such termination occurs, and in the event of a "change in control"
he would  receive  twelve months salary and 100% of on target bonus for the year
in which  such  termination  occurs,  and any  outstanding  options  held by Mr.
Perreault  would become fully  vested.  The Company has entered into  agreements
with Ms.  Brandt and Messrs.  Bowman,  Alston and Otis which provide for, in the
event of a "change in control", twelve months salary and 100% of on target bonus
for the year in which such termination  occurs, and any outstanding options held
by such individuals shall become fully vested. In February,  1999, Mr. Goldman's
agreement  was amended to reflect the fact that he is now  Chairman of the Board
of Directors of the Company.  Also in February,  1999, Mr. Perreault's agreement
was amended to reflect that he is now CEO and  President of the Company,  and as
such,  the terms of his agreement  were amended to reflect  twelve months salary
paid in the event of termination  for reasons other than "cause" and twenty-four
months salary to be paid by the Company in the event of a "change in control".

    In connection with their  employment,  these officers have also executed the
Company's standard  Non-Competition,  Non-Disclosure and Developments  Agreement
(the   "Non-Competition   Agreement").   These  agreements   contain   covenants
prohibiting the improper disclosure of confidential  information at any time, as
well as provisions  assigning to the Company all inventions made or conceived by
the officer during his employment with the Company. Each officer agreed with the
Company that, with certain  exceptions,  until one year after the termination of
his employment with the Company, he would not participate in any capacity in any
business activities  competitive with those of the Company. Each officer further
agreed not to  participate  in any  capacity in  soliciting  the business of any
customers or the services of any  employees of the Company  during such one-year
period.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

     The Compensation  Committee (the  "Committee")  established by the Board of
Directors  is  currently  composed of three  non-employee  Directors;  Arthur J.
Marks, Gerald B. Bay and David A. Litwack.  During fiscal 1998, the Compensation
Committee consisted of three non-employee Directors.  Except as set forth below,
no executive officer of the Company served during 1998 on the Board of Directors
or compensation  committee of any entity,  one of whose executive  officers also
served on the Board of  Directors  or  Compensation  Committee  of the  Company.
During 1998, Mr.  Goldman,  the Company's  Chairman of the Board,  President and
Chief  Executive  Officer,   served  as  a  Director  of  Parametric  Technology
Corporation,  of which Steven C. Walske,  a former Director of the Company,  who
resigned February 23, 1999 is Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer.
Mr. Goldman also served as a member of the compensation  committee of Parametric
Technology Corporation during 1998.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

    The  Compensation  Committee  of  the  Board  of  Directors  determines  the
remuneration and benefits of the Company's  executive  officers and other senior
management,  administers  the  Company's  stock option plans and Employee  Stock
Purchase  Plan and makes  determinations  with  respect to the granting of stock
options,  and acts in an advisory capacity to the Board of Directors  concerning
other compensation issues.

COMPENSATION POLICY

    The  Compensation  Committee's  policy with respect to  compensation  of the
Company's Chief Executive Officer and other executive  officers includes several
elements:  (i) the payment of  competitive  base  salaries to attract and


                                       9

<PAGE>

retain highly qualified personnel, (ii) the use of incentive compensation in the
form of cash bonuses to reward the achievement of Company  financial  objectives
such as achievement of budgeted  expense and  profitability  levels,  as well as
technical and market  development  goals,  (iii) in appropriate  instances,  the
payment of sales-based  commissions to reward  contributions  to revenue growth,
(iv) the  granting  of stock  options to  maintain  competitive  levels of total
compensation  to assist the Company in recruiting  and retaining  personnel,  as
well as to  align  management's  interests  with  those of  shareholders  and to
motivate executives to pursue the long-term success of the Company,  and (v) the
implementation  and execution of severance terms and conditions within executive
employment agreements in order to attract and retain highly qualified personnel.
The Committee  intends that the  Company's  executive  compensation  policies be
straightforward,   easily  communicated  to  and  understood  by  employees  and
shareholders,  and structured so that the  achievement of Company and individual
goals can be readily measured.

BASE SALARIES

    Competitive  base  salaries  are  established  through the use of  published
industry surveys and targeted peer company surveys that examine the compensation
practices of other  companies in the software  industry as well as of other high
technology companies in the relevant geographic area that might compete with the
Company in hiring or retaining strong performers.  The Committee,  utilizing the
collected data and applying the members' collective experience in recruiting and
managing in a technical environment,  seeks to establish base salaries that take
into account not only competitive factors but also the breadth of experience and
recent individual performance of the executive. The Committee's objective is not
to  determine  compensation  levels,  in general or for specific  positions,  by
seeking to achieve a specific  percentile  rank in comparison to  competitors or
peers, but rather to fix compensation  levels on a case-by-case  basis guided by
management's recommendations and the Committee members' experience and judgment.
In 1998, the Company's President and Chief Executive Officer, Robert N. Goldman,
and its  Executive  Vice  President  and  Chief  Operating  Officer,  Justin  J.
Perreault,  were paid base  salaries of  $210,000  and  $168,000,  respectively,
representing a 5% increase over prior year's salaries.

INCENTIVE COMPENSATION

    In establishing executive bonus levels, the Compensation Committee begins by
reviewing  management's  annual strategic and financial plan, as approved by the
Board of Directors at the  beginning of the year,  including  Company  financial
goals  and  individual  performance  goals,  proposed  by  the  Company's  Chief
Executive  Officer.  The bonus for which an  executive  officer  (other than the
Chief  Executive  Officer)  is eligible is  established  at this time,  and is a
percentage,  generally  ranging from 0% to 50%, of his annual base  salary.  The
percentage of this amount,  if any, awarded as a bonus at the end of the year is
determined by reference to both the Company's and the  executive's  performance.
The Chief  Executive  Officer's  bonus is determined  based on the attainment of
goals jointly  developed and agreed upon between the Chief Executive Officer and
the  Committee  and is not  fixed as a  specific  percentage  of his or her base
salary.  At the beginning of the year, the Chief Executive  Officer  presents to
the  Committee  an  analysis of the  performance  of the  individual  executives
against the overall corporate financial goals and then personal goals,  together
with his recommendations concerning specific management bonuses. After reviewing
these recommendations, the Committee determines whether, and in what amounts, to
award bonuses for the Chief Executive Officer and other executive officers.  For
1998,  neither Mr.  Goldman nor any other  executive  officer  received any cash
bonus,  as a result of the Company's  failure to achieve its targeted  financial
results. In 1999, in recognition of his new position as Chief Executive Officer,
Mr.  Perreault will be under a new bonus plan similar to Mr.  Goldman's while he
was in that role and not  specifically  targeted at a percentage of base salary.
In Mr.  Goldman's new role as Chairman,  Mr. Goldman will continue to be under a
bonus plan in 1999.


                                       10

<PAGE>

STOCK OPTIONS

    The  Compensation  Committee  believes  that  stock  option  grants  are  an
important element of the Company's executive  compensation  program, not only to
enable the Company to compete  effectively in recruiting and retaining employees
but also in order  to  align  the  interests  of  management  with  those of the
Company's  stockholders.  In granting options,  the Committee  considers,  among
other   factors,    competitive   conditions,    the   executive's   experience,
responsibilities  and performance,  the sizes of other individual grants and the
total number of options outstanding.  Option grants are awarded to all executive
officers  at the time they are  hired,  and  additional  options  may be granted
thereafter based upon specific individual or corporate achievements.

    For fiscal year 1998, Mr. Goldman was granted 275,000 options at an exercise
price of $6.13 and 25,000 options at an exercise price of $5.88;  Mr.  Perreault
was granted 50,000 options at an exercise price of $6.13; Ms. Brandt was granted
20,000  options at an exercise  price of $6.63;  Mr. Alston was granted  100,000
options at an exercise price of $7.13 and 30,000 options at an exercise price of
$3.94;  Mr. Bowman was granted  40,000 options at an exercise price of $6.63 and
60,000  options at an  exercise  price of $5.88;  Mr.  Otis was  granted  20,000
options at an exercise  price of $6.63 and 100,000  options at an exercise price
of $6.19;  and Mr.  Baryza was granted  20,000  options at an exercise  price of
$6.63.



POLICY REGARDING  SECTION 162(M) OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE

    Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended,  limits the
deductibility  of  compensation  in  excess  of $1.0  million  paid to the Chief
Executive Officer and the four most highly  compensated  officers of the Company
(other  than the  Chief  Executive  Officer)  in any  fiscal  year,  unless  the
compensation  qualifies as  "performance-based  compensation."  The Compensation
Committee's  policy with respect of Section  162(m) is to make every  reasonable
effort  to  cause   compensation   to  be   deductible   by  the  Company  while
simultaneously  providing  executive  officers of the Company  with  appropriate
rewards for their  performance.  The base  salaries and bonuses of the Company's
individual executive officers have not historically exceeded, and are not in the
foreseeable  future  expected to exceed,  the $1.0  million  limit,  and options
received by executive  officers  under the Company's  1996 Stock Option Plan are
intended to qualify as performance-based compensation.


                                                     The Compensation Committee

                                                     Gerald B. Bay
                                                     David A. Litwack
                                                     Arthur J. Marks

                                       11

<PAGE>


PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The following  Performance  Graph compares the performance of the Company's
cumulative  stockholder  return with that of a broad  market  index,  the Nasdaq
Stock Market  Index for U.S.  Companies,  and a published  industry  index,  the
Hambrecht & Quist  Technology  Index.  The  cumulative  stockholder  returns for
shares of the  Company's  Common  Stock and for the  securities  included in the
market and industry  indexes are calculated  assuming $100 was invested at their
last sale prices on July 23, 1996, the date on which the Company's  Common Stock
commenced  trading on the  Nasdaq  National  Market.  The  Company  paid no cash
dividends  during the periods shown.  The performance of the market and industry
indexes is shown on a total return (dividends reinvested) basis.


     COMPARISON OF TWO YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN IN SIX MONTH INTERVALS*
         AMONG OBJECT DESIGN, INC., THE NASDAQ STOCK MARKET (U.S.) INDEX
                   AND THE HAMBRECHT & QUIST TECHNOLOGY INDEX




<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                          7-23-1996     12-31-1996    6-30-1997      12-31-1997    6-30-1998     12-31-1998
                          ---------     ----------    ---------      ----------    ---------     ----------
<S>                         <C>           <C>          <C>             <C>            <C>           <C>
Object Design, Inc.          $100          $157         $115            $112           $80           $88

Nasdaq Stock Market          $100          $123         $138            $151           $182          $212
(U.S.)

Hambrecht & Quist            $100          $137         $157            $160           $199          $249
Technology

</TABLE>






*$100 INVESTED ON 7/23/96 IN STOCK OR INDEX - INCLUDING REINVESTMENT OF
 DIVIDENDS. FISCAL YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31.



                                       12


<PAGE>



                                  PROPOSAL TWO
               AMENDMENT TO THE 1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
                       TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF SHARES OF
                   COMMON STOCK available for grant thereunder

The Company's  1996 Employee  Stock  Purchase Plan (the "Stock  Purchase  Plan")
provides  that the total number of shares of Common Stock that are available for
grant thereunder shall not exceed 300,000. On February 23, 1999, the Board voted
to adopt,  and to submit to the  stockholders of the Company for their approval,
an  amendment  to the Stock  Purchase  Plan to increase by 200,000 the number of
shares of Common Stock  available  under the Stock Purchase Plan,  such that the
total number of shares of Common Stock  available  under the Stock Purchase Plan
be 500,000.  See "1996  Employee  Stock  Purchase Plan" for a description of the
material features of the Stock Purchase Plan, as amended, the classes of persons
eligible  to  participate  therein,  the  basis of such  participation,  and the
reasons for the amendment.

     The  Board  recommends  that you  vote  FOR the  proposal  to  approve  the
amendment of the Employee Stock Purchase Plan


                        1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN


    In 1996,  the Board of Directors  adopted,  and the  Company's  stockholders
approved, the 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the "Stock Purchase Plan"). The
Stock Purchase Plan is intended to qualify as an "employee  stock purchase plan"
under Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"),
and as such, to provide a method  whereby  employees of the Company will have an
opportunity  to acquire an, or increase an existing,  ownership  interest in the
Company through the purchase of shares of the Common Stock of the Company.

     The  Stock  Purchase  Plan,  as  initially  adopted  and  approved  by  the
stockholders  of the Company on May 23, 1996 (the  "Adoption  Date"),  fixed the
maximum  number of shares of Common Stock of the Company  available for issuance
and purchase by employees under the Stock Purchase Plan at 300,000.  On April 7,
1999,  the maximum  number of shares of Common Stock  available for issuance and
purchase under the Stock Purchase Plan was only 90,015.

AMENDMENT OF THE 1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

    On February 23, 1999, the Board of Directors  voted to adopt,  and to submit
to the stockholders of the Company for their approval, an amendment to the Stock
Purchase  Plan to  increase  by  200,000  the  number of shares of Common  Stock
available under the Stock Purchase Plan, such that the total number of shares of
Common Stock available under the Stock Purchase Plan be 500,000.  If approved at
the Annual Meeting,  the additional  200,000 shares will be added to the maximum
number available,  such that the maximum number of shares available for issuance
and purchase as of the date of the Annual  Meeting  will be 500,000  rather than
300,000 as originally provided in the Stock Purchase Plan.

    The Company  believes that the  availability  of an employee  stock purchase
plan is  important  to the  Company's  ability to recruit  and retain  qualified
employees,  as well as provide  employees with the opportunity to increase their
respective ownership interest in the Company.  Currently,  only 90,015 shares of
Common Stock are available for purchase and issuance  under the Company's  Stock
Purchase Plan.  This number will likely  decrease over the following year and if
the total  number of shares for which  options  are  exercised  on any  offering
termination date exceeds the



                                       13

<PAGE>
number of shares that remain  available  for  issuance and purchase by employees
under the Stock Purchase  Plan,  the Company must make a pro rata  allocation of
the shares available for delivery and distribution in an equitable  manner,  and
return to each  participant  of the Stock  Purchase  Plan any balance of payroll
deductions  credited to the account of each such participant.  In 1998 and 1997,
the Company issued 104,835 and 105,150 shares respectively. Without the proposed
amendment,  the number of shares  available  under the Stock  Purchase Plan will
eventually be completely  depleted.  The Board of Directors believes that in the
current competitive environment for highly-skilled  employees,  the amendment of
the Stock  Purchase  Plan to  increase  the  maximum  number of shares  issuable
thereunder  by 200,000  shares is  necessary  to enable  the  Company to provide
appropriate  long-term  incentives  to its  employees  and to recruit and retain
additional  highly-skilled  employees  to support  the  growth of the  Company's
business. The Board of Directors therefore recommends that stockholders vote FOR
the proposed amendment to the Stock Purchase Plan.

DESCRIPTION OF THE 1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

    The Stock Purchase Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee of the
Board of Directors  consisting of two or more non-employee  Directors (the "Plan
Administrator").  Under  the Stock  Purchase  Plan up to  300,000  shares of our
Common  Stock may  purchased at 85% of the lower of the fair market value of the
stock on the first or the last day of each six-month offering period.  Employees
may elect to have up to 6% of their base pay  withheld  and  applied  toward the
purchase of shares in each offering,  up to a maximum of $25,000 withheld in any
year.

    Participation   in  the  Stock   Purchase  Plan  is  completely   voluntary.
Participation  in any one or more of the offerings under the Stock Purchase Plan
shall neither limit,  nor require,  participation  in any other  offering.  Each
employee of the Company  whose  service  with the Company  commences on or after
November 1, 1996 is eligible to  participate  in the Stock  Purchase Plan on the
first  offering  commencement  date,  following the  completion of six months of
continuous service with the Company.  Each employee of the Company whose service
with the Company  commenced prior to November 1, 1996 is eligible to participate
in the Stock Purchase Plan on the first offering commencement date following the
commencement of service with the Company. As of April 7, 1999, approximately 231
employees of the Company and its  subsidiaries  were eligible to  participate in
the Stock Purchase Plan.

    Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  no employee will be granted an option under
the Plan: (i) if,  immediately  after the grant,  such employee would own stock,
and/or hold outstanding options to purchase stock,  possessing 5% or more of the
total  combined  voting power or value of all classes of stock of the Company or
any  subsidiary of the Company,  as determined  pursuant to the rules of Section
424(d) of the Code,  or (ii) which  permits  such  employees  rights to purchase
stock under all Section 423 employee stock purchase plans of the Company and its
subsidiaries to exceed $25,000 of the fair market value of the stock (determined
at the time such option is granted) for each  calendar year in which such option
is outstanding,  as determined pursuant to the rules of Section 423(b)(8) of the
Code.

    Any  eligible  employee  may become a  participant  by  completing a payroll
deduction  authorization  form  provided  by the  Company and filing it with the
Company's Treasurer 20 days prior to each applicable offering commencement date,
as determined by the Compensation  Committee. At the time a participant files an
authorization  for a payroll  deduction,  the  participant  shall  elect to have
deductions  made from his or her pay on each payday during any offering in which
he or she is a participant, at a specified percentage of his or her Compensation
as determined on the applicable  offering  commencement  date.  Each  employee's
specified  percentage  must  be in  increments  of 1% but in no  event  can  any
employee's  specified  percentage  exceed a maximum  percentage  of 6%.  Payroll
deductions for a participant  shall commence on the offering  commencement  date
when the applicable  authorization for a payroll deduction becomes effective and
shall  end on the  offering  termination  date of the  offering  to  which  such
authorization is applicable,  unless sooner  terminated by the participant.  All
payroll  deductions  made  for a  participant  shall be  credited  to his or her
account under the Stock Purchase  Plan. A participant  may not make any separate
cash

                                       14
<PAGE>
payment into such account.  A participant  may withdraw from the Stock  Purchase
Plan at any time during the applicable offering period. No interest will be paid
or allowed on any money paid into the Stock  Purchase  Plan or  credited  to the
account of any participating employee.

    Prior to the offering termination date for an offering,  any participant may
withdraw the payroll  deductions  credited to his or her account under the Stock
Purchase Plan for such offering by giving written notice to the Treasurer of the
Company.  All of the participant's  payroll deductions  credited to such account
will be paid to the participant  promptly after receipt of notice of withdrawal,
without interest,  and no future payroll deductions will be made from his or her
pay during  such  offering.  The  Company  will treat any attempt to borrow by a
participant on the security of accumulated  payroll deductions as an election to
withdraw such  deductions.  A  participant's  election not to participate in, or
withdrawal  from,  any  offering  will  not  have  any  effect  upon  his or her
eligibility to  participate  in any  succeeding  offering or in any similar plan
which  may  hereafter  be  adopted  by  the  Company.  Upon  termination  of the
participant's  employment  for any reason,  including  retirement  but excluding
death, the payroll deductions credited to his or her account will be returned to
the  participant,  or, in the case of his or her death, to the person or persons
entitled thereto.  Upon termination of the participant's  employment  because of
death,  his or her beneficiary  shall have the right to elect, by written notice
given to the Company's  Treasurer prior to the expiration of a period of 90 days
commencing  with  the  date of the  death  of the  participant,  either:  (i) to
withdraw all of the payroll  deductions  credited to the  participant's  account
under the Stock Purchase Plan; or (ii) to exercise the participant's  option for
the purchase of stock on the offering  termination  date next following the date
of the  participant's  death for the purchase of the number of full shares which
the accumulated  payroll deductions in the participant's  account at the date of
the  participant's  death will purchase at the applicable  option price, and any
excess in such account will be returned to said  beneficiary.  In the event that
no such written  notice of election  shall be duly received by the office of the
Company's  Treasurer,  the  beneficiary  shall  automatically  be deemed to have
elected to withdraw the payroll deductions credited to the participant's account
at the date of the  participant's  death and the same will be paid  promptly  to
said beneficiary.

    On the offering commencement date of each offering, a participating employee
shall be deemed to have been  granted an option to purchase a maximum  number of
shares of the Common Stock equal to an amount determined as follows:  (i) 85% of
the  market  value  per share of the  Common  Stock on the  applicable  offering
commencement  date shall be divided  into an amount  equal to the sum of (x) the
percentage of the  employee's  compensation  which he or she has elected to have
withheld  (multiplied by the employee's  compensation  over the offering period)
plus (y) any amounts in the employee's account on the offering commencement date
that have been carried forward from prior offerings;  multiplied by (2) two. The
option price of the Common Stock  purchased with payroll  deductions made during
each such offering for a  participant  therein shall be the lower of: (i) 85% of
the  average of the bid and the asked  prices as  reported by Nasdaq in the Wall
Street  Journal,  or, if the Common  Stock is  designated  as a national  market
security by the National Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc. ("NASD"),  the
last trading price of the Common Stock as reported by the Nasdaq National Market
System  in the Wall  Street  Journal,  or, if the  Common  Stock is listed on an
exchange,  the closing price of the Common Stock on the exchange on the offering
commencement  date applicable to such offering (or on the next regular  business
date on which shares of the Common  Stock shall be traded,  in the event that no
shares of the Common Stock have been traded on the offering  commencement date);
or if the  Common  Stock is not  quoted on Nasdaq,  not  designated  as a Nasdaq
national market  security and not listed on an exchange,  85% of the fair market
value  on the  offering  commencement  date as  determined  by the  Compensation
Committee;  and (ii)  85% of the  average  of the bid and the  asked  prices  as
reported  by Nasdaq in the Wall  Street  Journal,  or,  if the  Common  Stock is
designated as a national  market security by the NASD, the last trading price of
the Common Stock as reported by the Nasdaq  National  Market  System in the Wall
Street  Journal,  or, if the Common Stock is listed on an exchange,  the closing
price of the Common  Stock on the  exchange  on the  Offering  Termination  Date
applicable  to such  Offering  (or on the next  regular  business  date on which
shares of the Common  Stock shall be traded,  in the event that no shares of the
Common Stock shall have been traded on the offering termination date;

                                       15
<PAGE>
or if the  Common  Stock is not  quoted on Nasdaq,  not  designated  as a Nasdaq
national market  security and not listed on an exchange,  85% of the fair market
value on the offering termination date as determined by the Committee.

     Unless a participant  gives written notice to the Treasurer of the Company,
his or her option for the purchase of Common Stock with payroll  deductions made
during any offering will be deemed to have been exercised  automatically  on the
offering  termination  date  applicable to such offering for the purchase of the
number of full shares of Common Stock which the accumulated  payroll  deductions
in his or her account at that time (plus any amounts in his or her account  that
have been carried forward from prior  offerings) will purchase at the applicable
option  price,  and  any  excess  in  his/her  account  at  that  time  will  be
automatically  carried  forward  to the next  offering  unless  the  participant
elects,  by written  notice to the Treasurer of the Company,  to have the excess
returned to the participant.  The participant will have no interest in the stock
covered by his or her option until such option has been exercised.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THE COMPANY AND THE PARTICIPANTS

     There  are  no  Federal  income  tax  consequences  to the  Company  or the
participant  upon the grant or  exercise of an option  acquired  under the Stock
Purchase Plan. The  participant's  basis in the stock  purchased is equal to the
option exercise price. If the participant holds shares of Common Stock purchased
pursuant to the exercise of a Stock  Purchase Plan option for at least two years
after the date the option was granted  and at least one year after the  exercise
of the option,  (i) the subsequent  sale of the shares of Common Stock will give
rise to  ordinary  income  in an  amount  equal  to the 15%  discount,  (ii) the
participant's  basis in the  shares of Common  Stock  will be  increased  by the
amount  recognized as ordinary  income,  (iii) the participant  will recognize a
long-term  capital  gain or loss equal to the  difference  between the  adjusted
basis  and the  sale  price,  and (iv) no  deduction  will be  available  to the
Company.  If the  participant  sells the shares of Common Stock within two years
after the date the option was  granted or within one year after the  exercise of
the option,  (a) the  participant  will recognize  ordinary  income in an amount
equal to the  difference  between the fair market  value on the date of exercise
and the option exercise price, (b) the Company will be entitled to an equivalent
deduction,  (c) the  participant's  basis in such shares of Common Stock will be
increased by the amount  recognized as ordinary income,  and (d) the participant
will  recognize  a capital  gain or loss  equal to the  difference  between  the
adjusted basis and the sale price.

     Although  the  foregoing  summarizes  the  essential  features of the Stock
Purchase  Plan, it is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of
the Stock Purchase Plan as amended, which is attached as Exhibit 1 to this proxy
statement.

REGISTRATION OF SHARES AVAILABLE UNDER THE 1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

     The  Company  has  filed a  registration  statement  on Form S-8  under the
Securities  Act of 1933 to register the 300,000  shares of the Company's  Common
Stock that were  originally  reserved for issuance under the 1996 Employee Stock
Purchase Plan. If the proposed  amendment is approved by the  stockholders,  the
Company  intends to file, as soon as  practicable,  a registration  statement on
Form S-8 under the  Securities  Act of 1933  covering the  additional  shares of
Common Stock  issuable  under the 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan, as amended.
The Board of Directors has not determined  what action it will take in the event
that the stockholders do not approve the proposal.

SHARES PURCHASED UNDER THE 1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

     The  following  table  sets  forth the  number  of  shares of Common  Stock
purchased under Company's  Employee Stock Purchase Plan on or prior to March 31,
1999 to each of (i) the officers listed in the Summary  Compensation Table, (ii)
each of the  nominees for  election as a director,  (iii) all current  executive
officers of the Company as a group,  (iv) all  directors  of the Company who are
not executive  officers of the Company as a group,  and (v) all employees of the
Company, including all other current officers, as a group:

                                       16
<PAGE>

                            Employee(1)                         Number of Shares
                            -----------                         ----------------
Justin J. Perreault...........................................          1,208
Lacey P. Brandt...............................................          3,386
Lawrence E. Alston, Jr........................................            882
Kirk D. Bowman................................................          2,087
Brian W. Otis.................................................          4,644
Gregory A. Baryza.............................................          2,080
All current executive officers of the Company as a group......         12,207
All employees of the Company, including all other                     
current officers, as a group..................................        209,985
- -----------------------------
(1)      Does not include officers who have not purchased shares of Common Stock
         under the Stock  Purchase  Plan,  and  non-employee  directors  are not
         eligible to participate in the Stock Purchase Plan.








                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

RELATIONSHIP WITH INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION

     International Business Machines Corporation ("IBM") is the beneficial owner
of  approximately  9% of the Company's  outstanding  Common Stock as of April 7,
1999.  In 1993,  the Company  entered into  agreements  with IBM  providing  for
certain joint development and marketing  activities by the two companies,  which
agreements were terminated in 1996. Revenues from products and services provided
by the  Company to IBM during 1998 were  $308,000  and  constituted  0.5% of the
Company's total revenues for fiscal year 1998.

LOANS TO EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     In 1996, in connection with the exercise by Robert N. Goldman, the Chairman
of the Board of the Company and by Justin J. Perreault,  the President and Chief
Executive  Officer of the Company,  of stock  options  granted to them under the
Company's 1995 Nonqualified Stock Option Plan, to purchase 2,300,000 and 460,000
shares of Common Stock,  respectively,  the Company loaned to Mr. Goldman and to
Mr. Perreault  $572,700 and $114,540,  respectively.  The loan to each executive
was at an interest  rate of 7.0% per annum and was  pursuant to a full  recourse
promissory  note due upon the earlier of (i) April 1, 2001 and (ii) the date the
executive's employment with the Company terminates for any reason. Each loan was
originally  secured by a pledge to the Company of all the shares of Common Stock
acquired upon exercise of the option.  On January 29, 1997 the Company  released
2,048,950 and 409,790  shares from Messrs.  Goldman's and  Perreault's  pledges,
respectively,  with 251,050  shares and 50,210 shares,  respectively,  remaining
pledged to secure the outstanding  amount of principal and interest of the loans
to Messrs. Goldman and Perreault, respectively.


         SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     The  following  table sets forth  certain  information  with respect to the
beneficial  ownership of the Company's  Common Stock as of March 31, 1999 by (i)
each  person or group known to the  Company to be the  beneficial  owner of more
than five percent of the  outstanding  Common Stock;  (ii) each of the Company's
Directors and Director nominees; (iii) the Named Executive Officers and (iv) all
Directors,  Director nominees and executive  officers of the Company as a group.
The information as to each person has been furnished by such person.



                                       17

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                            Shares Beneficially Owned (1),(2)
Name and Address of Beneficial Owners                            Number          Percent
- -------------------------------------                            ------          -------
<S>                                                           <C>                <C>   
International Business Machines Corporation                    2,644,246          9.4%
 Old Orchard Road
 Armonk, NY 10504

Aeneas Venture Corporation (3)                                 2,707,526          9.6%
 c/o Charlesbank Capital Partners, LLC
 600 Atlantic Avenue, 26th Floor
 Boston, MA 02210

Robert N. Goldman                                              2,275,001          8.1%
 Object Design, Inc.
 25 Mall Road
 Burlington, MA 01803

Gerald B. Bay (4)                                              1,615,119          5.7%
 Vista Management
 27 Newport Street
 Jamestown, RI 02385

Arthur J. Marks (5)                                              878,047          3.1%
 New Enterprise Associates
 11911 Freedom Drive
 One Fountain Square, Suite 580
 Reston, VA 20190

Justin J. Perreault                                              391,250          1.4%
Lacey P. Brandt                                                  109,262           *
Lawrence E. Alston, Jr.                                           39,870           *
Kirk D. Bowman                                                   196,488           *
Brian W. Otis                                                    131,001           *
Gregory A. Baryza (6)                                            126,396           *
Kevin Burns                                                       11,834           *
Steven C. Walske (7)                                                               *
David A. Litwack                                                  11,834           *
All Directors and executive officers as a group (12 persons)   5,786,102         20.6%
* Less than one percent.

</TABLE>

(1) Except as  otherwise  indicated,  the persons  named in this table have sole
    voting and investment power with respect to all shares of Common Stock shown
    as  beneficially  owned by them,  subject to community  property  laws where
    applicable and subject to the information contained in the footnotes to this
    table.  Amounts shown for each  stockholder  include shares subject to stock
    options  exercisable  within 60 days of the date of this  table.  Shares not
    outstanding but deemed beneficially owned by virtue of the right of a person
    or group to acquire them within 60 days are treated as outstanding  only for
    purposes of  determining  the number of and percent  owned by such person or
    group.  As of March 31, 1999, the date of this table,  there were 28,117,730
    shares of Common Stock outstanding.


                                       18

<PAGE>

(2)  The amounts listed include the following shares of Common Stock that may be
     acquired on or prior to May 30, 1999 through the  exercise of options:  Mr.
     Alston, 39,855 shares; Mr. Baryza,  115,835 shares; Mr. Bay 120,166 shares,
     Mr. Bowman,  152,501 shares; Ms. Brandt,  101,876 shares, Mr. Burns, 11,834
     shares,  Mr. Goldman,  75,001 shares;  Mr. Litwack 11,834 shares, Mr. Marks
     20,166 shares,  Mr. Otis 117,939 shares,  and Mr.  Perreault 31,250 shares:
     and all directors and executive officers as a group, 798,257 shares.

(3)  Includes 2,475,552 shares of Common Stock owned of record by Aeneas Venture
     Corporation  ("Aeneas") and 186,962 and 45,012 shares of Common Stock owned
     of record by Phemus Corporation and Harvard Private Capital Holdings, Inc.,
     affiliates of Aeneas, respectively.

(4)  Represents  156,507  shares of  Common  Stock  owned of record by Mr.  Bay,
     120,166 shares that may be acquired on or prior to May 30, 1999 through the
     exercise of options held by Mr. Bay, 1,074,971 of shares owned of record by
     Vista III LP  ("Vista")  and  263,475  shares  owned of  record by  Philips
     Venture Fund ("Philips").  As a general partner of Vista who is the general
     partner of the Philips,  Mr. Bay may be deemed to have beneficial ownership
     of the Vista and Philips  shares.  However,  Mr. Bay  disclaims  beneficial
     ownership of shares owned by Vista and Philips.

(5)  Represents  20,166  shares that may be acquired on or prior to May 30, 1999
     through the exercise of options held by Mr. Marks,  461,799 of shares owned
     of record by New  Enterprise  Associates  V, Limited  Partnership,  387,500
     shares  owned  of  record  by  New  Enterprise   Associates  VII,   Limited
     Partnership,  8,000 shares owned of record by The Silverado  Fund I Limited
     Partnership,  and 582 shares owned of record by The NEA Silverado  Partners
     Limited  Partnership  Shares.  As  a  general  partner  of  New  Enterprise
     Associates  ("NEA"),  which is the  general  partner of the  aforementioned
     limited partnerships, Mr. Marks may be deemed to share beneficial ownership
     of such shares.  However,  Mr. Marks disclaims  beneficial ownership of all
     aforementioned shares associated with NEA.

(6) Mr. Baryza resigned as a corporate officer effective July 31, 1998.

(7) Mr. Walske resigned as a member of the board of directors effective February
23, 1999.


                                   ACCOUNTANTS

              The   Company   has   appointed   ('PricewaterhouseCoopers") LLP
("PricewaterhouseCoopers")  as  independent  accountants  to audit the financial
statements  of the  Company  for the  fiscal  year  ending  December  31,  1999.
Representatives  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  are  expected  to be present at the
Annual  Meeting,  will have an opportunity to make a statement if they desire to
do so, and are expected to be available to respond to appropriate questions from
stockholders.


             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires the Company's
officers  and  Directors,  and persons who  beneficially  own more than 10% of a
registered  class  of the  Company's  equity  securities,  to  file  reports  of
ownership and changes in ownership with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission
(the "SEC"). Officers, Directors and greater-than-10%  stockholders are required
by SEC regulations to furnish the Company with copies of all Section 16(a) forms
they file.

     Based  solely  upon  a  review  of  Forms  3 and 4 and  amendments  thereto
furnished to the Company during fiscal 1998 and Forms 5 and  amendments  thereto
furnished to the Company with respect to fiscal 1998, or written


                                       19

<PAGE>

representations  that Form 5 was not  required,  the Company  believes  that all
Section 16(a) filing  requirements  applicable  to its  officers,  Directors and
greater-than-10%  stockholders  were fulfilled in a timely  manner,  except that
each of Robert N. Goldman,  Justin J. Perreault,  Kirk D. Bowman and Lawrence E.
Alston  inadvertently failed to timely file a Notice on Form 4, in Mr. Goldman's
case with respect to a single  transaction for April, 1998 and four transactions
for May, 1998; in Mr.  Perreault's case with respect to a single transaction for
April,  1998 and three  transactions  for May,  1998; in Mr.  Bowman's case with
respect to two transactions for May, 1998; and in Mr. Alston's case with respect
to two transactions for May, 1998.


                              STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

     Stockholder  proposals for inclusion in the proxy materials  related to the
2000 Annual Meeting of  Stockholders  or special meeting in lieu thereof must be
received  by the  Company at its  executive  offices  no later  than  Wednesday,
December 22, 1999. In addition, the Company's By-Laws provide that a stockholder
must give  written  notice to the  Company not less than sixty days prior to the
scheduled  annual  meeting  describing  any  proposal to be brought  before such
Meeting,  even  if  such  item  is not to be  included  in the  Company's  proxy
statement  relating to such Meeting.  Such notice  requirements are set forth in
Section 3 of the Company's By-Laws. To bring an item of business before the 2000
Annual Meeting,  a stockholder must deliver the requisite notice of such item to
the Secretary of the Company no later than Friday, March 24, 2000.


                                  MISCELLANEOUS

     The Board does not intend to present  to the Annual  Meeting  any  business
other  than  the  proposals  listed  herein,  and the  Board  was not  aware,  a
reasonable  time before  mailing this Proxy  Statement to  stockholders,  of any
other business which properly may be presented for action at the Annual Meeting.
If any other business should come before the Annual Meeting, the persons present
will have  discretionary  authority  to vote the shares they own or represent by
proxy in accordance with their judgment.




                              AVAILABLE INFORMATION

     Stockholders  of record on April 7, 1999 will receive,  in addition to this
Proxy Statement,  the Company's Annual Report to Stockholders for the year ended
December 31, 1999, which contains detailed financial information  concerning the
Company.  The Company will mail,  without charge, a copy of the Company's Annual
Report on Form 10-K (excluding exhibits) to any stockholder solicited hereby who
requests  it in  writing.  Please  submit any such  written  request to Investor
Relations, Object Design, Inc., 25 Mall Road, Burlington, Massachusetts 01803.


                                       20
<PAGE>

                                    EXHIBIT 1


              OBJECT DESIGN, INC. 1996 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN


1. PURPOSE.

The Object  Design,  Inc.  1996  Employee  Stock  Purchase  Plan (the "Plan") is
intended to provide a method  whereby  employees  of Object  Design,  Inc.  (the
"Company")  will have an  opportunity  to  acquire  an  ownership  interest  (or
increase an existing ownership  interest) in the Company through the purchase of
shares of the Common  Stock of the Company.  It is the  intention of the Company
that the Plan qualify as an "employee  stock purchase plan" under Section 423 of
the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code").  The  provisions of
the  Plan  shall,   accordingly,   be  construed  so  as  to  extend  and  limit
participation  in a manner  consistent with the  requirements of that section of
the Code.

2. DEFINITIONS.

         (a) "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Company.

         (b) "Code" shall have the meaning set forth in Paragraph 1.

         (c) "Committee" means the Compensation Committee of the Board.

         (d) "Common  Stock" means the common stock,  par value $.001 per share,
         of the Company.

         (e) "Company"  shall  also   include  any  Subsidiary  (as  hereinafter
         defined) of Object Design, Inc. designated as a participant in the Plan
         by the Board, unless the context otherwise requires.

         (f) "Compensation"  means, for  the purpose of any Offering pursuant to
         this Plan, base pay in effect as of the Offering  Commencement Date (as
         hereinafter  defined).  Compensation  shall not  include  any  deferred
         compensation other than contributions by an individual through a salary
         reduction  agreement  to a cash or  deferred  plan  pursuant to Section
         401(k) of the Code or to a  cafeteria  plan  pursuant to Section 125 of
         the Code.

         (g) "Employee"  means  any person who is  customarily  employed  by the
         Company  for more than 20 hours  per week and more than five  months in
         any calendar year.

         (h) "Offering" shall have the meaning set forth in Paragraph 4.

         (i) "Offering  Commencement  Date" shall  have the meaning set forth in
         Paragraph 4.

         (j) "Offering  Termination  Date"  shall have  the meaning set forth in
         Paragraph 4.

         (k) "Plan" shall have the meaning set forth in Paragraph 1.

         (l) "Subsidiary"  shall mean any present or future corporation which is
         or would constitute a "subsidiary  corporation" as that term is defined
         in Section 425 of the Code.

     3. ELIGIBILITY.

         (a) Participation in the Plan is completely voluntary. Participation in
         any one or more of the Offerings  under the Plan shall  neither  limit,
         nor  require,  participation  in any  other  Offering  (as  hereinafter
         defined).


<PAGE>
         (b) Each  employee  of the  Company  whose  service  with  the  Company
         commences on or after November 1, 1996 shall be eligible to participate
         in the Plan on the first  Offering  Commencement  Date, as  hereinafter
         defined,  following the completion of six months of continuous  service
         with the Company.  Each  employee of the Company whose service with the
         Company  commenced  prior to  November  1, 1996  shall be  eligible  to
         participate  in  the  Plan  on the  first  Offering  Commencement  Date
         following the commencement of service with the Company. Notwithstanding
         the foregoing, no employee shall be granted an option under the Plan:

         (i) if,  immediately  after the grant,  such employee  would own stock,
         and/or hold  outstanding  options to purchase  stock,  possessing 5% or
         more of the total  combined  voting  power or value of all  classes  of
         stock of the Company or any Subsidiary; for purposes of this Paragraph,
         the rules of Section 424(d) of the Code shall apply in determining  the
         stock ownership of any employee; or

         (ii) which  permits his rights to purchase  stock under all Section 423
         employee stock purchase  plans of the Company and its  Subsidiaries  to
         exceed $25,000 of the fair market value of the stock (determined at the
         time such  option is  granted)  for each  calendar  year in which  such
         option is  outstanding;  for purposes of this  Paragraph,  the rules of
         Section 423(b)(8) of the Code shall apply.

     4. OFFERING DATES.

     The right to purchase stock  hereunder  shall be made available by a series
     of  six-month  offerings  (the  "Offering"  or  "Offerings")  to  employees
     eligible in accordance with Paragraph 3 hereof.  The Committee will, in its
     discretion,  determine  the  applicable  date  of  commencement  ("Offering
     Commencement Date") and termination date ("Offering  Termination Date") for
     each Offering.  Participation in any one or more of the Offerings under the
     Plan shall neither limit, nor require, participation in any other Offering.

     5. PARTICIPATION.

     Any eligible  employee  may become a  participant  by  completing a payroll
     deduction authorization form provided by the Company and filing it with the
     Company's Treasurer 20 days prior to each applicable Offering  Commencement
     Date, as determined by the Committee pursuant to Paragraph 4.

     6. PAYROLL DEDUCTIONS.

         (a) At the time a  participant  files an  authorization  for a  payroll
         deduction, the participant shall elect to have deductions made from his
         or her pay on each payday  during any  Offering in which he or she is a
         participant,  at a specified  percentage of his or her  Compensation as
         determined  on  the  applicable   Offering   Commencement   Date;  said
         percentage  shall  be in  increments  of one  percent  up to a  maximum
         percentage of six percent.

         (b) Payroll deductions for a participant shall commence on the Offering
         Commencement  Date  when the  applicable  authorization  for a  payroll
         deduction becomes  effective and shall end on the Offering  Termination
         Date of the Offering to which such authorization is applicable,  unless
         sooner terminated by the participant as provided in Paragraph 9.

         (c) All payroll  deductions made for a participant shall be credited to
         his or her  account  under the  Plan.  A  participant  may not make any
         separate cash payment into such account.

         (d) A  participant  may  withdraw  from the Plan at any time during the
         applicable Offering period.


<PAGE>
     7. GRANTING OF OPTION.

         (a) On the Offering Commencement Date of each Offering, a participating
         employee  shall be deemed to have been  granted an option to purchase a
         maximum  number  of  shares  of the  Common  Stock  equal to an  amount
         determined  as  follows:  (i) 85% of the market  value per share of the
         Common  Stock on the  applicable  Offering  Commencement  Date shall be
         divided  into an amount equal to the sum of (x) the  percentage  of the
         employee's  Compensation  which he or she has elected to have  withheld
         (multiplied by the employee's  Compensation  over the Offering  period)
         plus  (y)  any  amounts  in the  employee's  account  on  the  Offering
         Commencement  Date that have been carried forward from prior Offerings;
         multiplied by (ii) two. Such market value per share of the Common Stock
         shall be determined as provided in clause (i) of Paragraph 7(b).

         (b) The  option  price  of the  Common  Stock  purchased  with  payroll
         deductions  made during each such  Offering for a  participant  therein
         shall be the lower of:

                  (i) 85% of the  average  of the bid and the  asked  prices  as
                  reported  by Nasdaq  in the Wall  Street  Journal,  or, if the
                  Common Stock is  designated as a national  market  security by
                  the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"),
                  the last trading  price of the Common Stock as reported by the
                  Nasdaq National Market System in the Wall Street Journal,  or,
                  if the  Common  Stock is listed on an  exchange,  the  closing
                  price of the  Common  Stock on the  exchange  on the  Offering
                  Commencement  Date applicable to such Offering (or on the next
                  regular  business  date on which  shares of the  Common  Stock
                  shall be  traded,  in the event  that no shares of the  Common
                  Stock have been traded on the Offering  Commencement Date); or
                  if the Common Stock is not quoted on Nasdaq, not designated as
                  a  Nasdaq  national  market  security  and  not  listed  on an
                  exchange,  85% of  the  fair  market  value  on  the  Offering
                  Commencement Date as determined by the Committee; and

                  (ii) 85% of the  average  of the bid and the  asked  prices as
                  reported  by Nasdaq  in the Wall  Street  Journal,  or, if the
                  Common Stock is  designated as a national  market  security by
                  the  NASD,  the  last  trading  price of the  Common  Stock as
                  reported  by the  Nasdaq  National  Market  System in the Wall
                  Street  Journal,  or,  if the  Common  Stock is  listed  on an
                  exchange,  the  closing  price  of  the  Common  Stock  on the
                  exchange on the Offering  Termination  Date applicable to such
                  Offering (or on the next regular business date on which shares
                  of the  Common  Stock  shall be  traded,  in the event that no
                  shares of the  Common  Stock  shall  have  been  traded on the
                  Offering  Termination  Date);  or if the  Common  Stock is not
                  quoted on Nasdaq,  not designated as a Nasdaq  national market
                  security and not listed on an exchange, 85% of the fair market
                  value on the Offering  Termination  Date as  determined by the
                  Committee.

     8. EXERCISE OF OPTION.

         (a) Unless a participant  gives written  notice to the Treasurer of the
         Company as hereinafter provided,  his or her option for the purchase of
         Common Stock with payroll  deductions  made during any Offering will be
         deemed to have been exercised automatically on the Offering Termination
         Date applicable to such Offering for the purchase of the number of full
         shares of Common Stock which the accumulated  payroll deductions in his
         or her  account  at that time (plus any  amounts in his or her  account
         that have been carried  forward from prior  Offerings) will purchase at
         the applicable  option price (but not in excess of the number of shares
         for which  options  have been  granted  to the  employee,  pursuant  to
         Paragraph  7(a)),  and any  excess in his  account at that time will be
         automatically   carried   forward  to  the  next  Offering  unless  the
         participant  elects, by written notice to the Treasurer of the Company,
         to have the excess returned to the participant.

<PAGE>

         (b)  Fractional  shares  will  not be  issued  under  the  Plan and any
         accumulated  payroll  deductions which would have been used to purchase
         fractional  shares shall be  automatically  carried forward to the next
         Offering  unless  the  participant  elects,  by  written  notice to the
         Treasurer  of the  Company,  to have the excess  cash  returned  to the
         participant.

     9. WITHDRAWAL AND TERMINATION.

         (a)  Prior  to the  Offering  Termination  Date  for an  Offering,  any
         participant may withdraw the payroll deductions  credited to his or her
         account  under the Plan for such Offering by giving  written  notice to
         the  Treasurer  of  the  Company.  All  of  the  participant's  payroll
         deductions  credited to such  account  will be paid to the  participant
         promptly after receipt of notice of withdrawal,  without interest,  and
         no future  payroll  deductions  will be made from his or her pay during
         such  Offering.  The  Company  will  treat any  attempt  to borrow by a
         participant  on the security of  accumulated  payroll  deductions as an
         election to withdraw such deductions.

         (b) A participant's election not to participate in, or withdrawal from,
         any Offering  will not have any effect upon his or her  eligibility  to
         participate in any succeeding Offering or in any similar plan which may
         hereafter be adopted by the Company.

         (c) Upon  termination of the  participant's  employment for any reason,
         including  retirement  but  excluding  death,  the  payroll  deductions
         credited to his or her account will be returned to the participant, or,
         in the case of his or her  death,  to the  person or  persons  entitled
         thereto under Paragraph 13.

         (d) Upon termination of the participant's  employment because of death,
         his or her  beneficiary  (as  defined in  Paragraph  13) shall have the
         right to elect,  by written  notice  given to the  Company's  Treasurer
         prior to the expiration of a period of 90 days commencing with the date
         of the death of the participant, either:

                  (i) to withdraw all of the payroll  deductions credited to the
                  participant's account under the Plan; or

                  (ii) to exercise the participant's  option for the purchase of
                  stock on the Offering Termination Date next following the date
                  of the  participant's  death for the purchase of the number of
                  full shares which the  accumulated  payroll  deductions in the
                  participant's  account at the date of the participant's  death
                  will purchase at the applicable  option price,  and any excess
                  in such account will be returned to said  beneficiary.  In the
                  event that no such  written  notice of election  shall be duly
                  received  by  the  office  of  the  Company's  Treasurer,  the
                  beneficiary  shall  automatically be deemed to have elected to
                  withdraw the payroll deductions  credited to the participant's
                  account  at the date of the  participant's  death and the same
                  will be paid promptly to said beneficiary.

     10. INTEREST.

     No  interest  will be paid or  allowed  on any money  paid into the Plan or
     credited to the account of any participating employee.

     11. STOCK.

         (a) The maximum number of shares of Common Stock available for issuance
         and purchase by employees  under the Plan,  subject to adjustment  upon
         changes in  capitalization  of the Company as provided in Paragraph 16,
         shall be 300,000 shares of Common Stock,  $.001 par value per share, of
         the  Company.  If the  total  number of shares  for which  options  are
         exercised on any Offering Termination Date in accordance
<PAGE>

         with Paragraph 8 exceeds the number of shares that remain available for
         issuance and purchase by employees  under the Plan,  the Company  shall
         make a pro rata  allocation  of the shares  available  for delivery and
         distribution  in an  equitable  manner,  with the  balances  of payroll
         deductions  credited to the account of each participant  under the Plan
         returned to each participant.

         (b) The  participant  will have no interest in the stock covered by his
         or her option until such option has been exercised.

     12. ADMINISTRATION.

     The Plan shall be administered  by the Committee.  The  interpretation  and
     construction  of any  provision  of the Plan  and  adoption  of  rules  and
     regulations  for  administering  the Plan  shall be made by the  Committee.
     Determinations  made  by  the  Committee  with  respect  to any  matter  or
     provision contained in the Plan shall be final, conclusive and binding upon
     the   Company   and   upon   all   participants,   their   heirs  or  legal
     representatives.  Any rule or  regulation  adopted by the  Committee  shall
     remain in full  force and  effect  unless and until  altered,  amended,  or
     repealed by the Committee.

     13. DESIGNATION OF BENEFICIARY.

     A  participant  shall  file  with the  Treasurer  of the  Company a written
     designation of a beneficiary who is to receive any Common Stock and/or cash
     under the Plan.  Such  designation  of  beneficiary  may be  changed by the
     participant at any time by written notice.  Upon the death of a participant
     and upon receipt by the Company of proof of the identity and existence of a
     beneficiary  validly  designated  by the  participant  under the Plan,  the
     Company shall deliver such Common Stock and/or cash to such beneficiary. In
     the event of the death of a participant and in the absence of a beneficiary
     validly  designated  under  the  Plan  who is  living  at the  time of such
     participant's  death,  the Company  shall  deliver such Common Stock and/or
     cash to the executor or administrator of the estate of the participant.  No
     beneficiary  shall, prior to the death of the participant by whom he or she
     has been  designated,  acquire any interest in the Common Stock and/or cash
     credited to the participant under the Plan.

     14. TRANSFERABILITY.

     Neither  payroll  deductions  credited to a  participant's  account nor any
     rights with regard to the exercise of an option or to receive  Common Stock
     under the Plan may be assigned, transferred, pledged, or otherwise disposed
     of in any way by the participant  other than by will or the laws of descent
     and distribution. Any such attempted assignment, transfer, pledge, or other
     disposition shall be without effect, except that the Company may treat such
     act as an election to withdraw funds in accordance with Paragraph 8(b).

     15. USE OF FUNDS.

     All payroll deductions  received or held by the Company under this Plan may
     be used by the Company for any corporate purpose, and the Company shall not
     be obligated to segregate such payroll deductions.

     16. EFFECT OF CHANGES OF COMMON STOCK.

     If the Company  shall  subdivide or  reclassify  the Common Stock which has
     been or may be  optioned  under this Plan,  or shall  declare  thereon  any
     dividend  payable in shares of such Common  Stock,  or shall take any other
     action of a similar nature affecting such Common Stock, then the number and
     class of shares of Common  Stock which may  thereafter  be optioned (in the
     aggregate and to any participant) shall be adjusted  accordingly and in the
     case of each option  outstanding at the time of any such action, the number
     and class of shares  which may

<PAGE>

     thereafter  be  purchased  pursuant to such option and the option price per
     share  shall  be  adjusted  to  such  extent  as may be  determined  by the
     Committee,  following  consultation with the Company's  independent  public
     accountants  and  counsel,  to be  necessary  to preserve the rights of the
     holder of such option.


     17. AMENDMENT OR TERMINATION.


     The Board may at any time terminate or amend the Plan. No such  termination
     shall affect  options  previously  granted,  nor may an amendment  make any
     change in any option  theretofore  granted which would adversely affect the
     rights of any participant holding options under the Plan.


     18. NOTICES.


     All notices or other  communications  by a participant to the Company under
     or in connection with the Plan shall be deemed to have been duly given when
     received by the Treasurer of the Company.


     19. MERGER OR CONSOLIDATION.


     If the Company  shall at any time merge into or  consolidate  with  another
     corporation,  the holder of each option then outstanding will thereafter be
     entitled  to  receive  at the  next  Offering  Termination  Date,  upon the
     exercise of such option and for each share as to which such option shall be
     exercised,  the  securities or property  which a holder of one share of the
     Common  Stock  was  entitled  to upon  and at the  time of such  merger  or
     consolidation.  In  accordance  with this  Paragraph  and Paragraph 16, the
     Committee  shall  determine  the  kind and  amount  of such  securities  or
     property  which such holder of an option  shall be  entitled to receive.  A
     sale of all or  substantially  all of the  assets of the  Company  shall be
     deemed a merger or consolidation for the foregoing purposes.


     20. APPROVAL OF STOCKHOLDERS.


     The Plan is subject to the approval of the  stockholders  of the Company by
     written  consent or at their next annual meeting or at any special  meeting
     of the stockholders for which one of the purposes of such a special meeting
     shall be to act upon the Plan.


     21. GOVERNMENTAL AND OTHER REGULATIONS.


     The Plan,  and the grant and  exercise  of the  rights to  purchase  shares
     hereunder, and the Company's obligation to sell and deliver shares upon the
     exercise of rights to purchase  shares,  shall be subject to all applicable
     federal,  state  and  foreign  laws,  rules  and  regulations,  and to such
     approvals by any regulatory or  governmental  agency as may, in the opinion
     of counsel for the Company, be required. The Plan shall be governed by, and
     construed and enforced in accordance  with, the provisions of Sections 421,
     423 and 424 of the Code and the  substantive  laws of The  Commonwealth  of
     Massachusetts. In the event of any inconsistency between such provisions of
     the Code and any such laws, said provisions of the Code shall govern to the
     extent  necessary to preserve the  favorable  federal  income tax treatment
     afforded employee stock purchase plans under Section 423 of the Code.


<PAGE>

                      THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF
                  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF OBJECT DESIGN, INC.
                A STOCKHOLDER WISHING TO VOTE IN ACCORDANCE WITH
                  THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
               NEED ONLY SIGN AND DATE THIS PROXY AND RETURN IT IN
                             THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.

                Please complete and return the proxy card below.

                                   DETACH HERE
                                   OBJF

PROXY

                               OBJECT DESIGN, INC.

                    PROXY FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD ON MAY 26, 1999

The undersigned stockholder of Object Design, Inc. (the "Company"), revoking all
prior proxies,  hereby appoints Justin J. Perreault and Lacey P. Brandt,  or any
of them acting singly,  proxies,  with full power of  substitution,  to vote all
shares of capital stock of the Company which the undersigned is entitled to vote
at the Annual meeting of  Stockholders to be held at the offices of the Company,
25 Mall Road,  Burlington,  Massachusetts  01803,  on  Wednesday,  May 26, 1999,
beginning  at 10:00 a.m.,  local time,  and at any  adjournments  thereof,  upon
matters set forth in the Notice of Annual  Meeting  dated April 23, 1999 and the
related Proxy Statement,  copies of which have been received by the undersigned,
and in their  discretion  upon any business  that may  properly  come before the
Annual Meeting or any adjournments thereof. Attendance of the undersigned at the
Annual  Meeting or any  adjournment  thereof  will not be deemed to revoke  this
proxy unless the undersigned shall  affirmatively  indicate the intention of the
undersigned  to vote  the  shares  represented  hereby  in  person  prior to the
exercise of this proxy.


THE  SHARES  REPRESENTED  BY THIS  PROXY  WILL BE VOTED AS  DIRECTED  OR,  IF NO
DIRECTION IS GIVEN WITH RESPECT TO THE  PROPOSALS SET FORTH ON THE REVERSE SIDE,
WILL  BE  VOTED  FOR  SUCH  PROPOSALS  OR  OTHERWISE  IN  ACCORDANCE   WITH  THE
RECOMMENDATION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

                   CONTINUED AND TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE


<PAGE>


                     DETACH HERE

[x] Please mark
    votes as in
    this example.


1.  Proposal  to elect the  following  nominees  as Class III  directors  of the
    Company:

      Nominees:  Robert N. Goldman and Kevin J. Burns

             FOR ALL          WITHHOLD
            NOMINEES
              [ ]               [ ]


2. Proposal to approve the amendment            FOR         AGAINST      ABSTAIN
   of the Company's 1996 Employee               [ ]           [ ]          [ ]
   Stock Purchase Plan to increase the
   number of shares available for grant
   thereunder by 200,000.


   FOR ALL
   EXCEPT
    [ ] ---------------------------------------------

   INSTRUCTION: To withhold authority to vote for any
   individual nominee, mark the "For All Except" box 
   and write in that nominee's name.



                           MARK HERE FOR ADDRESS CHANGE AND NOTE AT LEFT [ ]

                            Please promptly date and sign this proxy and mail it
                            in the enclosed envelope to assure representation of
                            your shares. No postage need be affixed if mailed in
                            the United States.

                            Please sign  exactly as name(s)  appear(s)  on stock
                            certificate.  If shares  are held by joint  tenants,
                            both should sign. If  stockholder  is a corporation,
                            please  sign full  corporate  name by  president  or
                            other  authorized  officer  and,  if a  partnership,
                            please sign full  partnership  name by an authorized
                            partner or other  authorized  person.  If signing as
                            attorney,   executor,   administrator,   trustee  or
                            guardian, please give full title as such.



Signature: _______________________ Date: _________________________


Signature: ________________________Date: _________________________





© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission