Hostility Remains after Hewlett-Packard, Compaq Merger Votes Mar 26, 2002 (Houston Chronicle - Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News via COMTEX) -- Combining Hewlett-Packard Co. with Compaq Computer Corp. would have been a Herculean task even if all had gone smoothly. But with the deal passing by the narrowest of margins, and many HP employees opposed to it, the effort is expected to be even more difficult. The HP shareholder meeting in Cupertino, Calif., last week, has been dubbed the "Flint Center Fracas," for the rowdy crowd and the auditorium in which it was held. Carly Fiorina, HP's chief executive, faced an often hostile crowd that booed her on more than one occasion, even before declaring victory with only a preliminary vote estimate to go on. Many of those booing were HP employees. She now has the task of persuading those employees to get behind the deal. Adding to the friction between HP management and the rank and file is the knowledge that once the deal closes, some 15,000 workers will lose their jobs. Still, the majority of HP workers will be keeping their jobs and those who do will likely come around to support Fiorina as she begins to combine the companies, said Mark Specker, analyst with Soundview Technologies Group. "It is not clear to me that she is not going to have their support," Specker said. "The reason Carly got up after the meeting and said they won was not to change the outcome of the vote. She has to get this thing started. People have to make life decisions. There is a lot of anxiety over there now." Fiorina also faces the task of melding a culture with a history that dates to the 1930s with one that was created just 20 years ago. Compaq employees have already expressed fears that their culture will be quickly erased and replaced with "the HP Way." HP is viewed as engineering-oriented and Compaq as sales-oriented. Many HP employees mistrusted Fiorina long before the Compaq deal was announced, in part because she has made promises they believe she has not kept, and because she comes from a marketing background. "I've never met an engineer who could trust a marketing person any farther then they could thrown them," said Mary-fran Johnson, editor of Computereworld, a weekly magazine on the technology industry. The resulting culture following the integration will likely reflect the successful aspects of both companies. "I think the HP executive culture is going to be the dominant one among upper management," said Richard Doherty, reserarch director for the Envisioneering Group. "Compaq has assembled a very good team of middle management in their PC and server business, so there is no need to change that." The companies have more than 900 people working on the integration team prepared to begin the job of combining the two companies once the merger vote is certified, which is expected to take weeks. But no matter how many people the companies throw at the thorny issue of integration, the track record for large technology mergers is not good. "It's going to be difficult, and unfortunately, history shows us that most of these mergers don't work, even with a broader tide of acceptance than there is this time," Doherty said. The integration team has been dubbed "cultural astronauts," because the tasks they face is considered so ground breaking. Focus groups of employees have been conducted to explore cultural differences as well as their similarities. Walter Hewlett, an HP director and son of co-founder Bill Hewlett, led the opposition to the merger and has yet to concede defeat. He believes the margin for HP is between 0.5 percent and 2 percent of HP's shares. Hewlett said Monday he will support the merger as a director and shareholder if the final vote shows HP shareholders approved the deal. If the merger is approved, the two companies will begin the daunting work of integrating a company with hundreds of products, 150,000 employees and more than $78 billion in revenues. The new company, which will retain the HP name, expects to divide into four units: imaging and printing; computers; services; and servers, software and storage. Hewlett's main gripe with the deal was that HP shareholders' stake in the company's lucrative imaging and processing business would be diluted and their exposure to low-end personal computers will be increased. The integration effort is expected to take from two to four years and many analysts have warned that the new HP will likely lose market share to rivals, such as IBM, as it goes through the logistics of combining. "An integration of this size is clearly a significant challenge and is unparalleled in the technology world," said David Bailey, an analyst with Gerard Klauer Mattison. "Because of the great deal of overlap of the product line, it will be even more difficult than if HP had acquired a services company." The companies have a product "roadmap" plotted for the next three years, but executing the plan could prove to be one of the biggest hurdles the new company faces. "As far as the product plans being complete, the devil is in the details. We'll have to wait and see which products are going to remain and what are the plans to phase out old products. Compaq ran into these issues with Digital." From the Compaq perspective, the new company will likely concentrate much of its efforts on high-end servers and storage products; the company is No. 1 over Dell in worldwide server market share. Many analysts are refusing to speculate on the integration, saying it is still too soon to call the vote for either side. A report surfaced Monday that Deutsche Asset Management, a large HP shareholder, switched its vote from against the deal to supporting it after its investment banking partner company closed a deal to extend HP a $4 billion line of credit just days before the vote. "We're taking a wait-and-see approach," said Tom Burnett with Merger Insight, an arm of Wall Street Access. "Right now the market is telling us that it does not believe this is a done deal." Both companies' shares have been steadily declining since the HP shareholder vote last week. Compaq shares closed Monday at $10.63, down 2 cents per share. HP closed at $18.12 per share, down 3 cents per share. By Michael Davis To see more of the Houston Chronicle, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to houstonchronicle.com (c) 2002, Houston Chronicle. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News |