Two
tech titans designate each other public enemy No. 1
[27th October 2003]
NEW YORK, Oct 27, 2003 (AP WorldStream
via COMTEX) -- IBM Corp. made a bigger incursion than
usual at this year's HP World - a trade show for thousands
of Hewlett-Packard Co. customers, equipment resellers
and companies whose technologies work on HP computer
systems.
IBM traditionally has a booth at HP
World to display software that runs on HP systems. But
at the August show in Atlanta, Big Blue urged attendees
to depart HP World for a seminar about IBM's own systems,
sweetening the offer with a drawing for a free convertible.
Meanwhile, IBM marketers drove around
the Georgia World Congress Center handing out Lego building
blocks to brag about the toy company's decision that
week to replace HP computing systems with IBM products.
In a rivalry with big implications for
these two U.S. technology stalwarts - and for the companies,
schools and governments that spend billions on their
products - IBM is doing its utmost to keep HP a wannabe.
HP picked this fight last year when
it bought Compaq Computer Corp. for $19 billion, the
biggest high-tech acquisition ever, and said it would
challenge IBM's lead in lucrative corporate computing
markets.
And while there is little sign that
HP is even close to beating IBM at its own game, IBM
isn't taking chances.
It has doubled the commissions it pays
resellers who oust HP products. It beats its chest whenever
it beats HP to a big contract, like one coming this
week with Alpine Electronics Inc. And its people portray
HP as a bit player in services and software - which
generate two-thirds of IBM's revenue.
"I don't ever see HP," said
Scott Hebner, an IBM software vice president. "They
don't bring any real software assets to the table."
The head of IBM's systems group, William
Zeitler, contends HP is so worried about losses in the
server market that it is aggressively cutting prices
and possibly "stuffing" its sales channel
- artificially boosting revenue by giving resellers
more products than they need. HP denies the charge.
Zeitler also predicts that most customers
who spurn IBM servers will choose low-cost specialist
Dell Inc., not HP.
IBM now pays a 10 percent commission,
up from 5 percent, to certain resellers who get businesses
to replace their HP equipment with IBM gear. IBM gives
the same cut if it's Sun Microsystems Inc. that's on
the losing end.
HP says it considered all the IBM broadsides
a compliment. And it, too, offers a commission to sales
partners who displace IBM or Sun - 15 percent.
"It's not surprising IBM is trying
to point their guns in our direction," said Jim
Milton, an HP senior vice president in enterprise systems.
"It's a testimony to how we're doing in the marketplace."
Zeitler called the commission increase
a mere sign of IBM aggressiveness.
"We intend to move as many users
as we can to our side, and use every weapon in our arsenal
to do it," he said.
That battle helps customers.
At O.C. Tanner Co., a workplace services
firm with IBM and HP servers, chief information officer
Dave Berg said HP "bent over backwards" to
keep IBM from making more inroads. HP let Berg try a
server for free for six months before he finally decided
to buy.
"I like the idea of having both
of them captive, because in some ways, it keeps both
of them honest," Berg said. "As long as they
serve us well, what's the difference?"
Actually, both companies love to highlight
their differences.
Armonk, New York-based IBM, which generated
$87 billion in revenue the last four quarters, is mainly
focused on corporate and government markets, though
it still makes consumer laptops. Meanwhile, Palo Alto,
California-based HP, which had $71 billion in revenue
in the past year, also sells consumer printers, cameras
and home entertainment devices.
When it comes to corporate computing,
IBM makes more of what it sells, including Web infrastructure
software and chips for several kinds of servers. IBM
says its in-house assets help it shape products for
customers in particular industries.
HP has its own network-management software
but mainly incorporates software from other vendors,
notably Microsoft Corp., BEA Systems Inc. and Oracle
Corp. HP is banking heavily on Intel Corp.'s Itanium
server chips, which HP co-developed.
HP says its approach helps customers
get more out of their existing equipment instead of
forcing them to buy all new stuff.
"IBM is using a page from the playbook
of the '70s and '80s, which was: IBM's operating systems,
IBM's applications, IBM's services," said Nora
Denzel, who heads HP's "adaptive enterprise"
service. "Ultimately that play was rejected."
HP says adopting technologies made by
others is less expensive. But IBM has made similar bets
- it also offers servers with Intel processors and the
open-source Linux operating system.
And there isn't much evidence IBM costs
more.
Interland Inc., a Web hosting company
with HP and IBM servers, recently shifted new purchases
toward IBM. The two brands were "very similar,"
said John Lally, Interland's product management director,
but "IBM was able to win on economics, which was
our most important decision point."
IBM is the world's top server seller
by revenue. HP sells more units, however, and is the
top supplier of servers on the Linux and Windows operating
systems.
Those are two fast-growing segments,
but they also produce lower profit margins.
Another risk for HP is having "an
awful lot on its plate," because it is spread across
so many markets and is trying to cut costs, said analyst
Charles King of the Sageza Group.
Also, while both companies' services
divisions can help drum up hardware business, HP has
only 65,000 employees in services to IBM's 180,000.
IBM bolstered that by buying PricewaterhouseCoopers'
consulting arm last year for $3.9 billion - a deal HP
explored in 2000 at about $17 billion.
"From HP's standpoint, the services
side is where they still have a way to go versus IBM,"
said Meta Group analyst Rob Schafer.
Even so, HP and IBM had better get used
to each other. There's only so much business to go around.
In April, Procter & Gamble Co. hired
HP to take over its internal tech operations, a 10-year
deal worth $3 billion. Five months later, P&G announced
a 10-year, $400 million pact to turn over management
of its human-resources department to IBM.
Each contract required HP and IBM to
take hundreds of P&G employees on as their own,
which means "both IBM and HP will be working collaboratively
in several areas," P&G spokesman Damon Jones
said.
"We don't see any reason,"
he added, "why these companies won't be able to
work together, successfully." |