If you gave someone a representative sample of news stories about HP over the
past five years and asked them to define the HP Way, what would they say?
Adjectives such as dysfunctional, defensive and controversial would almost
certainly figure. Hardly the ideals of trust, integrity and teamwork laid out by
Messrs Hewlett and Packard as they emerged from their shed.
For its critics, HP is a company in crisis, beset by a divided boardroom and
accused of unethical business practices. But earlier this month,
the company overtook Dell to become
the world’s leading PC supplier – only by a few decimal places of market
share, admittedly, but an important milestone nevertheless.
To complete the picture, former chief
executive Carly Fiorina, the architect of the acquisition of Compaq in 2001,
is back in the headlines too, promoting her memoirs and revealing more of the
boardroom backbiting that resulted in her departure.
Does any of this matter to IT directors? If PC sales are anything to go by,
apparently not. HP has become the perfect example of the mismatch between
investors and customers in IT. What matters is product quality, innovation, and
customer service, all long-term issues upon which IT leaders can build a
technology strategy. Share price is important, of course, but how many IT
leaders base their decisions on the stock market? Not many.
Fiorina claims the Compaq buy is finally paying off, and that HP is seeing
the benefits of her long-term vision. Her critics, of whom there are many, point
to the 50 per cent drop in HP’s share price during her tenure, although they
omit the fact that much of that was during the post-9/11, post-dot com crash,
when technology stocks suffered across the board.
Much of the criticism of Fiorina, even now, smacks of a cosy, male-dominated
business world that resented a successful woman in its midst. At worst, it
verges on misogyny. She made mistakes for sure, and her successor Mark Hurd has
put his fingerprints on the supplier’s strategy, but Fiorina was right to see
that HP needed to change.
The Compaq purchase was always a long-term play, designed to lay the
foundation for the company HP would become in 10 years, not in one, two, or even
five. There was inevitably going to be pain along the way. You cannot deny the
importance and influence of Wall Street, but the critical audience has to be the
customers, and the positive message for HP is that they seem to be buying.
What do you think? Email us at
feedback@computing.co.uk
Further reading:
HP
beats Dell on global PC shipments
California
files charges against former HP chairman
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