January 31, 2001
Capellas Says Compaq Is Ready To Take On IBM, Fujitsu Siemens
By DAVID PRINGLE Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Michael Capellas is fast turning Compaq Computer Corp., the world's biggest personal-computer maker, into a broad supplier of Internet access technology, but he can't afford to take his foot off the accelerator. Last week, Houston-based Compaq cut its revenue forecasts for 2001 citing the unexpectedly sharp slowdown in the desktop PC market. Since he became chief executive in the summer of 1999, the effervescent Mr. Capellas has made Compaq less reliant on desktop PCs, but the slowdown is prompting rivals, including Europe's Fujitsu Siemens Computers -- a joint venture between Siemens AG of Germany and Fujitsu Ltd. of Japan, to also step up their efforts to sell servers, portable computers and other digital devices.
But Mr. Capellas claims Compaq has a significant head start. To make the point, he used the high-profile annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos this week to showcase Compaq's broad range of wireless technology. Compaq's technicians installed a high-speed wireless network and scores of servers in the Swiss ski resort's Congress Center and handed out free hand-held computers to the 2,200 delegates, allowing them to zip each other messages and download video clips of the conference sessions.
The project was the biggest of its kind yet and was something of a gamble, but it appears to have largely paid off. Although the network suffered several technical glitches, delegates seemed to have been impressed with the technology. Fresh from a grilling from Wall Street, Mr. Capellas arrived in Davos Monday, where he spoke with David Pringle of The Wall Street Journal Europe. He explained how Compaq is challenging International Business Machines Inc. in the high-margin business-services market, while taking on the Japanese consumer electronics giants in the market for digital entertainment devices. But Mr. Capellas is shying away from a head-to-head battle with the mobile phone industry. Here is an extract from the interview.
Q: Dell Computer Corp. claims to be catching you in the server market. How are you going to fend off Dell and others?
A: As the low end (of the server market) starts to commoditize, you have got to be able to take performance and scale higher and higher. So we will continue to move the bar higher at the high end. So, I think you have to differentiate when you look at market share numbers and say what part of the market you want to be in.
As you look at the portfolio of products we have, we line up on IBM. We are the only two companies in the business that actually have a highly extensive services organization. Of course H-P (Hewlett Packard Co.) is building one as well. We have 40,000 service engineers. So, we want really innovative products, but we also want really innovative solutions.
Q: When do you expect hand-held computers to be a really significant business for Compaq?
A: The hand-held will start to be significant in terms of revenue in the next two to three months. If you take a Pocket PC (hand-held computer) fully loaded with a wireless (connection) you are starting to push on the same price as a fully loaded desktop. This will be a serious margin contributor. The margins on the Pocket PC are very good because the cost of manufacturing is so low -- you are not going through all the complexities of the traditional configure-to-order models.
Q: You are planning to launch a hand-held computer with a built-in phone. Are you going to be competing head-on with the mobile phone makers?
A: This is the great unfought war. There is no question we are converging on the same space. How that sorts out in terms of partnerships and competition in this crazy world we live in (I don't know). We are (already) a huge provider of the infrastructure to mobile phone operators. Now the relationship gets more interesting.
But I think it makes more sense to go into partnerships. In this day and age you need to be smart enough to know what you do well and want you don't. We have done some interesting partnerships with (Telefon AB L.M.) Ericsson and I think you will see us probably looking to form more joint marketing.
Do the telcos buy the computer companies? Do the computer companies buy the telcos? Remember only last year we thought the Internet start-ups were going to buy us both and that didn't happen. It is all about how the middle ground is formed.
Q: Do you see Compaq in the long-term as a mobile phone company?
A: No, I really do see us being in the Internet access business. You are going to see much more sophisticated user interfaces -- we will do video, we will do video peer to peer (the exchange of video clips between consumers) and we will certainly do audio, music and voice-recognition commands.
Because the content delivery will be so massive, you will have to have intelligence on the device for these next generation interfaces. I think the part that a lot of people miss, when they think about the future of computing, is just how much capacity it is going to take to drive these very sophisticated user interfaces.
Q: Do you see yourself competing with consumer electronics companies or forming partnerships?
A: We will compete. Here is a (Compaq) MP3 player, but our skill isn't just in building the device, If you have a one-touch connection with your PC then you manage the music on a PC that connects to the Internet. The question is: Is a consumer electronics company better able to take the device and do the interaction, the computation, the network and the data or is it easier for us to make the device with the knowledge to build through the rest of the stream? We will compete more and more with the classical consumer electronics companies.
Q: Do you plan to compete in the set-top box (digital television decoder) market?
A: There is going to be a gateway into the home and there will be a wireless home network that will have computers. We are in the wireless LAN (local area network) business and we are in the wireless home business. We will be in the business of connecting the wireless device out to an extranet and we are in the business of building firewalls to protect your home for security reasons. So maybe we are in that business, but maybe a set-top box is not our definition of what the market is.
Q: Do you see the recent slowdown in the PC market as a catalyst for further consolidation in the industry?
A: It depends what business you are in. IBM, Compaq and Hewlett-Packard have substantial computational platforms, which they extend into the Internet access business. I think that just making PCs is going to be a very tough play. But there won't be a slowdown in the number of people who want to access the Internet, there won't be a slowdown in the volume of content, there won't be a slowdown in the richness of content.
Q: How optimistic are you about consumer demand for technology over the next year or so?
A: I think there is no question that the enterprise and the infrastructure rollout is where the growth is in the first half of the year. On the consumer side the fundamentals that led to the decline was simply a lack of confidence because it went too fast to be anything else.
There are three things that are really going to make a jump on the consumer side. The first one is music and video stream to the home. For that to happen we need broadband to be rolled out and broadband is being rolled out, perhaps not as fast as we hoped. The second thing we need is content providers that can do the distribution and that is already filled with Disney, AOL etc. The third thing is you need to be able to present the technology with very high-performance, which means stereo speakers and high-resolution graphics processors.
The delivery of the next generation of content, rich graphics, interactive screens, interactive gaming, music, video, peer-to-peer, interactive video conferencing -- that is what is going to drive the next big kick and that will happen.
Q: In Europe, especially, it seems that consumers aren't really aware of these possibilities.
A: I think Europe is taking a breather while it figures out what form of Internet access it wants. Will it be cellular phones, will it be the PC or the handheld? I do think that there is a little more pause for thought than there was in the United States.
Write to David Pringle at david.pringle@wsj.com |