This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2011/090611-bradner.html
HP (again) shows us how not to do it
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
September 06, 2011 02:55 PM ET
HP management has
not been good to the company over the last few years. One would have to do a
lot of searching to find a management team that has so thoroughly messed up in
the court of public opinion.
Starting with HP wiretapping
its own board members back in 2006 and continuing at least until HP's decision a month ago to explore "strategic
alternatives" for its Personal Systems Group -- and announcing that before
figuring out what they will actually do -- HP has done an almost perfect job of
demonstrating how not to run a business.
Along the line
there was the very messy firing
of HP CEO Mark Hurd and then, seemingly to ensure
that the story stayed in the press, suing
him when he got hired by Oracle.
Most recently, HP canceled
its TouchPad iPad wannabe after only a few weeks on the market.
In this long line
of dumb moves, the announcement about HP's PC
manufacturing Personal Systems Group is maybe the dumbest and the business that
would have been the easiest to do right. When IBM
decided to get out of the PC business it waited until it had a buyer lined
up to let the world know about the move. In sharp contrast, HP
announced that it would be pondering what to do with its PC business until
at least the end of the year and provided no hints as to the division's future
other than to say that it "may include, among others, a full or partial
separation of PSG from HP through a spin-off or other transaction." What
IT managers in their right mind are now going to develop major plans that
depend on HP hardware or software?
HP has managed to
put a $42 billion-a-year business at risk by willfully, it seems, ignoring how
its announcement was going to be seen by its customers.
If you are in
corporate management please do use HP as an anti-role model. It can be easy to
blow the credibility of a company and very hard to earn it back. HP has been
trying again and again to destroy its credibility, at least for common sense.
The recent moves strike at the heart of a company's future -- they make
potential customers think strongly about alternative products.
Another company
whose management also tried very hard to destroy its image and future seems to
have finally gotten to the end of its road.
The SCO Group
lost its latest, and maybe last, court appeal of a string of negative
decisions concerning its attempt to extort billions of dollars from IBM and Linux users. This has
been a very long and slimy road -- one that contained at least as many self-inflicted
wounds on the part of the SCO Group as does the HP
saga. But it may finally be over.
Disclaimer: Both
the HP and SCO Group histories seem to be perfect subjects for Harvard Business
School Case Studies -- students could be shown a world of bad business
decisions and the results of those decisions -- but I have no idea if the
Business School wants to tell such depressing stories. Thus, the above studies
in ineptitude are my own.
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