"It's an interesting situation ... digitalme has now walked me into some *huge* accounts and opportunities, however I have not been able to gain the attention or listening of any of the executives of Novell. So we (a couple of us) are spending part-time efforts to take the site forward. We are making great progress, but without official resources and support do not hold your breath. We have some very simple, straight-forward intentions ... but little sponsorship for our work. I have approached the CTO office ... and so we'll see what occurs!"
Not Well at Novell By Andrew Binstock
May 15, 2001 — In my Jan. 15 column (“Special Achievement Awards”), I presented my version of high-tech’s Dubious Achievement Awards. At the time, I presented the Wish I Had a Vision Award to Novell’s then-CEO, Eric Schmidt. In the write-up, I acknowledged the sad irony that the previous winner was Schmidt’s predecessor at Novell, Bob Frankenberg.
Not surprisingly, both men cut similar profiles. They are both engineers and heavily technology oriented. Neither had serious business experience before becoming CEO. Both came over after long careers with Silicon Valley powerhouses (Frankenberg from Hewlett-Packard, Schmidt from Sun). Neither one articulated a vision for Novell when they were brought onboard, although both acknowledged that their company was in dire straits.
To this list, we can now add: Both left the company in worse shape than they found it. Perhaps more accurately, neither one did anything important to bolster the company. In both cases, the lost time hurt Novell badly—thereby worsening its market position.
Interestingly, Schmidt has not completely left Novell. He remains chairman of the board. This is not a good thing. For if the last two Novell CEOs can win the same award for lack of vision, isn’t the real culprit here the Novell board of directors? What it failed to grasp was Novell did not need an engineer at the helm; it needed a businessman. But, with Schmidt heading up the board, it’s unclear whether board members will suddenly see the red light they missed the last two times through the intersection. And will a new CEO receive the support from a board headed by the less-than-successful former CEO?
You may not have noted that earlier this year, Novell agreed to acquire Cambridge Technology Partners (CATP) for $250 million. The motivation behind the move was Novell’s concern that major corporations wouldn’t buy its good technology because IT consultants (read: the Big Five consulting firms) were all recommending Microsoft or Unix products. Obviously, by buying its own consulting firm, Novell would have legions of brainy hirelings who could spread the Provo gospel.
In a roundabout way, this is an admission that Novell has done a poor job marketing its own technology. Certainly we would expect that if the same quarter-of-a-billion dollars had been spent on marketing, these past few years would have produced far better results than those we can extrapolate for the CATP acquisition.
Consider that CATP was relatively inexpensive because its stock had recently tanked to less than $3 per share. This valuation is attributable to the company’s first yearly loss since its founding in 1991. The loss should not be attributed to the crash of the e-conomy during 2000: CATP was showing signs of distress before the collapse. Its 1999 net profit of $2.1 million was its lowest since its founding—down from the previous year’s net of $58 million. At the time, the downdraft was attributed to the costs of moving into e-services consulting. Predictably, the 2000 loss was attributed to the costs of getting out of the same.
None of this inspires confidence and, to my eye, finds no parallel in Hewlett-Packard’s sensibly aborted acquisition of PricewaterhouseCoopers’ consulting practice. CATP was a company in distress bought by a company in distress. So, where is the synergy? Don’t ask me; I don’t see any.
The story doesn’t improve if you look at the move from the customer side. CATP is unlikely to attract customers on the basis of its Novell affiliation. Well, it might attract existing Novell shops, but this will be at the cost of other customers who don’t want a bunch of consultants who will parrot the Novell company line.
This plan does not show how the new company can attract customers outside of the two existing customer pools. This is the critical question and the one that Novell has yet to answer. Schmidt won’t have to do this, because CATP’s CEO, Jack Messman, will now serve as the CEO of Novell. Should this inspire confidence?
On the one hand, Messman has an MBA and is a businessman by profession. This is the good news. However, he was brought in to CATP in July 1999 to turn the company around. Instead the decline accelerated. Moreover, Messman’s roots at the old Novell are long and deep. He was the CEO from 1982 to 1983, before the company really took off under Ray Noorda. Moreover, he has been on Novell’s board since his tenure as CEO, meaning he figured in the choices of Frankenberg and Schmidt and did nothing when Novell’s ship repeatedly ran aground. Could these failures have sobered him? Nah.
When asked by The Industry Standard, “Who is the most powerful behind-the-scenes person in the Internet industry today?” Messman answered, “Eric Schmidt, CEO of Novell.”
From which I conclude, we should not expect things to improve. |