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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: hlpinout who wrote (96456)3/21/2002 8:11:15 PM
From: hlpinout  Respond to of 97611
 
KeyLink Pushing Upside Of HP/Compaq

By Rich Cirillo
VARBusiness
- 2:52 PM EST Thurs., Mar. 21, 2002

With the once unlikely notion of a combined Hewlett-Packard/Compaq suddenly looking a lot more like reality, some solution providers will no doubt find themselves in an uneasy position, wondering how they'll ultimately fit into the new company's channel strategies.
But as the two companies work to integrate their businesses and create efficient go-to-market strategies, strong channel relationships on both sides of the fence will become more important than ever, says the executive in charge of marketing for distributor KeyLink Systems' relationship with Compaq.

"Clearly there are some changes in the works, and it's too early to tell what the full impact on the channel will be," says Pat O'Connor, vice president of worldwide Compaq relationship marketing at KeyLink Systems, the distribution arm of Pioneer-Standard Electronics. "But we will stand with our resellers to make this transition seamless and successful. The key is making sure partners and customers are taken care of and we've got our arms around them during the transition period."

It looks as if KeyLink isn't the only party concerned with allaying the fears of Compaq channel partners in the wake of this week's shareholder votes. On Wednesday, Compaq chairman and CEO Michael Capellas reached out to the company's channel partners himself, sending a letter to solution providers shortly after company shareholders voted in favor of the merger. In it he assured them that the company's "commitment to your success is unwavering."

The distributor, which has been working with Compaq (and the former Digital Equipment) for the past two decades, has been in regular communication with the vendor's channel executives since the merger was first announced in September, gauging the company's long-term channel plans.

"I believe they have done a fair amount of homework behind the scenes in terms of putting the plan together," says O'Connor. "We certainly believe the merger creates an abundance of new business opportunities for us and partners."

Over the last year, the distributor has seen strong business in its legacy Compaq accounts, which have traditionally bought both Alpha-based and Intel-based products.

"Those are still the mainstays of our business," he says, noting that clients continue to upgrade and install systems as they see new opportunities, particularly on the software side. "Oracle is one example. In the traditional spaces the whole information boom has caused them, through software-related solutions, to purchase upgrades and additional hardware."

That said, he believes from a technology perspective, the merged company will be a "force to be reckoned with," particularly because of the strength of Compaq's storage offerings being combined with HP's platform business.

"That makes a real powerhouse in terms of this new company going forward," he says.

O'Connor, whose company works with about 4,400 VARs worldwide, says the Compaq resellers he hears from are generally positive about the merger and recognize the new opportunities that will come from it.

"But they are suffering from what a lot of folks are right now--lack of information," he says, noting that the situation is more the result of legal restrictions surrounding the merger process than either company's intention for secrecy.

And while some solution providers have voiced concerns in the weeks and months leading up to the shareholder votes that a combined company--with a large consumer PC division and a significant direct services component--might be inclined to focus more on direct sales, KeyLink's position is that the combined entity will end up relying on the channel even more.

"I believe both Michael Capellas and Carly Fiorina have said that publicly," says O'Connor. "Certainly there are pieces of the business they are looking at and making some decisions around, but a strong channel is very important to them going forward. I believe that to be the case, especially from the conversations that we've had with Compaq."



To: hlpinout who wrote (96456)3/21/2002 8:12:08 PM
From: hlpinout  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 97611
 
Compaq VARs Embrace HP, Urge Quick Action

By Joseph F. Kovar
CRN
Irvine, Calif. - 8:09 PM EST Wed., Mar. 20, 2002

A number of big Compaq Computer solution providers are already in the final stages of obtaining Hewlett-Packard certifications, having started the process weeks ago in anticipation that shareholders would approve the merger.
The Compaq solution providers interviewed by CRN were generally in favor of the merger but warned that HP needed to hurry up with details about how it plans to merge the channels and product lines.

One of them, Don Richie, president of Sequel Data, Austin, Texas, said Sequel would have gone through the HP certification even if there had been no merger on the horizon.

"We have heard a lot about HP programs," he said. "HP has its Hard Deck and says it will not sell below that level directly. Compaq says it has one, too, but there are no guarantees."

Rich Baldwin, president of Nth Generation, a San Diego-based firm and one of Compaq's largest West Coast solution providers, said his company just obtained HP certification and also will begin selling HP products regardless of whether the merger ultimately goes through.

"I'm taking advantage of this opportunity," Baldwin said. "Compaq is promoting the merger. I'm getting the jump on it. In September, I went out and started the paperwork. Storage, big Unix boxes,my strategy from day one has been to be ready to work with both vendors. Even if the merger doesn't work out, I'm ready to work with both vendors. Compaq can't be pissed at me,they encouraged me to do it."

Sequel's Richie said he hopes the merger happens, and happens fast. "The waiting is killing us," Richie said. "Customers are putting business off because they are not certain of what to buy. On top of that, IBM and Sun are out spreading the FUD."

Richie said it was scary to see IBM and Sun Microsystems so happy about the pending merger. "If they were worried about the new competition, they should show it more. Instead, they are cheerful," he said.

Richie said the big advantage to the merger for Compaq is that HP is focused on the enterprise, while Compaq is still known as a PC company. "The problem is, Compaq doesn't see that," he said. "Look at their marketing. It's all focused on the PC. Never on the enterprise, never on storage."

A recent meeting with HP executives in Dallas convinced Richie that HP is running the merger, a much better proposition given Compaq's handling of its Digital Equipment acquisition in 1998.

"HP enterprise VARs should hope HP keeps its current programs, otherwise they will be disappointed," he said. "Compaq, even after acquiring Digital, still thinks like a PC company."

Todd Barrett, networking sales manager for CPU Sales and Service, a Waltham, Mass.-based Compaq and HP solution provider, said he hopes the merger question gets settled as fast as possible so he can go back to fighting against Dell.

"Everyone using Compaq or HP systems is starving for information," Barrett said. "Dell has been calling on accounts, telling them that no matter which way the merger goes, there will be changes in the products, and so they might as well switch to Dell. . . . A lot of customers wonder if their favorite HP or Compaq person will walk out the door, and a Dell rep walk in right after them."

Barrett said there could be two possible outcomes to the merger. First, the combined company could better understand the importance of the channel and invest the amount of resources needed to grab market share. "But on the flip side, a new group might say it has to compete against Dell, and so might end up with two people out there trying to cover 5,000 resellers," he said.

Steven Manteros, general manager of GST/Micro City, a Cerritos, Calif.-based solution provider working with both HP and Compaq, said whether or not the merger holds up, the two vendors will have to develop new strategies.

"The merger vote has been a distraction to them both," he said. "To grow, they need to make changes. I don't want to speculate. But I would like to see them both come in, discuss where they want to go, what steps they want to take, and how they will view their channel resources."



To: hlpinout who wrote (96456)3/21/2002 8:14:41 PM
From: hlpinout  Respond to of 97611
 
March 21, 2002 09:35

Buffalo, N.Y., University Officials Say Compaq Still Supports Bio-Med Center
By Fred O. Williams, The Buffalo News, N.Y.
Mar. 20--Merger target Compaq Computer Corp. may be swallowed up, but its support for Buffalo's bio-medical research center will stay put, University at Buffalo officials said Tuesday.

Compaq is one of the top corporate backers of UB's Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics, having pledged $42.6 million in cash and equipment.

Now, its existence as an independent company may be coming to an end. On Tuesday, Hewlett-Packard chief Carly Fiornia predicted victory in her company's proxy-vote drive to acquire Compaq.

But in recent meetings at UB, Compaq gave reassurances that its support for the bioinformatics center will continue -- merger or no merger, UB Provost Elizabeth D. Capaldi said.

"It will mean nothing for us," she said of the potential takeover. "We will work with the same people we've been working with."

Compaq spokeswoman Barbara Crystal said she couldn't comment on the possible takeover.

UB is waiting for two sophisticated pieces of Compaq equipment that will support the bioinformatics center, said Russ Miller, director of the university's Center for Computational Research. The first, a data storage system, is to be installed this spring, he said. A bank of Compaq AlphaServer computers is coming in the fall.

"Everything is still on target," Miller said, as the Amherst campus prepares to install the equipment.

Compaq machines played a role in the sequencing of the human genetic code. Now the company is working to preserve its momentum as a maker of research tools by signing cooperative agreements such as the one with UB.

Under the agreement, Compaq is giving UB a discount on its high-end equipment, along with software and access to a pool of venture capital, Capaldi said. The amount that UB is paying for the discounted equipment is confidential, she said.

The AlphaServer at UB has 64 processors with a combined number-crunching power of 1 trillion operations per second, Compaq has said. The "teraflop" performance level will put UB among a small group of research universities with such computing power.

Both H-P and Compaq make business-class server computers. But Compaq's high-end storage and computer products are unique to the company, Miller said.

Compaq's sales to higher education is a booming part of its business, with 50 percent growth in 2001, spokeswoman Crystal said.

The bioinformatics center isn't the only organization in Western New York that could be affected by the possible merger of the computer makers.

Ingram Micro has ties to both H-P and Compaq, as a distributor of both companies' products, spokeswoman Jennifer Bair Marchetta said. However, she said, it's impossible to tell what impact a combination of the two companies might have in Ingram and its national sales center in Amherst.

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To: hlpinout who wrote (96456)3/21/2002 8:16:15 PM
From: hlpinout  Respond to of 97611
 
Poetic justice?
--
March 21, 2002 03:13

Hewlett-Packard Heir's Stock Sale May Have Come Back to Haunt Him in Vote
San Jose Mercury News, Calif.
Mar. 21--It's a photo finish.

Walter Hewlett's side says HP is ahead by the very thin margin of just 10 million shares.

If he should lose, Hewlett may have to reflect on those 10 million shares, given that in the past six months the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation -- which he chairs -- sold roughly 6.3 million shares.

In other words, the Hewlett Foundation may have given away nearly two-thirds of the purported margin of victory to its opposition. It is not quite like accidentally scoring a goal in your own net -- but it's close.

The Hewlett Foundation has said all along that it has an independent stock committee that makes stock sale decisions with the primary goal of diversifying the foundation's portfolio.

Still, "it would be sadly ironic if our diversification had this effect," said Paul Brest, the foundation's president. Given that the results might not be known for weeks, "we'll have to see how this plays out."

Just to give 10 million shares some context: All of Hewlett-Packard's executives and directors, other than Hewlett, had, as of Jan. 28, a combined 1.3 million shares, according to the company's annual filings. Except for a few small sales in November, none of HP's top brass sold in the months prior to the shareholders meeting.

WHERE WAS THE BOARD? When Carly Fiorina, HP's chief executive, looked down from the podium at Tuesday's spirited shareholders' meeting, she saw and heard a mostly hostile audience.

The most friendly faces were in the first two rows, which were reserved for HP's top executives and board members.

But the only outside board member there was Sam Ginn, the retired chairman of Vodafone. And of course, dissident director Hewlett was there with his own row of seats in the middle of the hall, cordoned off for his team.

"They had their own business to attend to," said Fiorina, when asked at the press conference after the meeting about the whereabouts of the HP board.

And maybe they were busy, but typically board members attend company shareholder meetings. And given that board members played a full role in the battle -- writing letters to Hewlett and shareholders -- it was surprising that they were not there.

Charles O'Reilly, a professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, said the board may have realized that there might not even be a definitive vote on Tuesday.

"If the answer had been no, they would have called a board meeting immediately. Other than the kind of symbolism involved around showing their face, there isn't a lot of need to go," he said.

DOES WALTER KEEP HIS SEAT? It seemed like an olive branch to the opposition but something crucial was left out.

After the shareholders' meeting, Fiorina acknowledged the role of the Hewlett and Packard families.

"This company will always be proud to bear the Hewlett and Packard family names," she said in her press conference. "And therefore the Hewlett and Packard families will always be a part of us."

But she did not say whether she wants Hewlett's part in the company to come with a board seat. Hewlett says he wants to be a director. Michael Capellas, Compaq's chief executive, said the decision to renominate Hewlett will be up to the HP side of the combined company's board.

THE INNOVATIVE SET: Many HP shareholders at the meeting were wearing green, the color of Walter Hewlett's proxy card to oppose the merger with Compaq.

But some were more innovative than others. One HP retiree, Stan Gage, scanned a green proxy card, enlarged it, printed it out and then sewed it onto a T-shirt. And yes, he used HP products -- HP scanning and printing equipment. Except for the needle and thread.

DO NOT BELIEVE THE MEDIA: In a November memo to employee, Fiorina declared the press lazy for failing to study up on the details of the $20 billion HP/Compaq merger.

She had more to say about reporters at Tuesday's special meeting.

They're stupid, too.

During the meeting, a shareholder cited a Mercury News story in which Hewlett's camp was quoted as saying HP employees voted shares they hold in their retirement plans against the merger by a 2-to-1 margin.

Fiorina answered that wasn't so.

The shareholder wanted to know: Is the Mercury News wrong?

"It wouldn't be the first time..." Fiorina said before being drowned out by hoots and laughter.

VOTING THE WAY WE LIKE: The Packard Foundation voted against the merger -- but on the white proxy, the one HP had sent, rather than the green proxy, which Hewlett had sent. Also, even though the foundation had already voted its shares against the deal via proxy, George Vera, the foundation's chief financial officer, attended Tuesday's meeting.

Mercury News staff writers Michelle Quinn, Therese Poletti, Tracy Seipel and Mike Cassidy and Mercury News data analyst Jack Davis contributed to this report.

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