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To: Don Green who wrote (34948)9/18/2002 11:26:19 AM
From: Don Green  Respond to of 213172
 
Cheryl Vedoe leaves Apple, joins Apex Learning
by Dennis Sellers, dsellers@maccentral.com
September 18, 2002 9:50 am ET

Cheryl Vedoe, the president of Apple's PowerSchool division, is leaving the company to become the president and chief executive officer of Apex Learning, a provider of online courses and instructional materials for high schools. She'll take the helm on Sept. 23.

At Apple, Vedoe served as vice president of education products and marketing and president of PowerSchool, a student information system that was used by 2,000 schools nationwide. She was also a founder and the CEO of Tenth Planet, a company that specializes in classroom technology. Vedoe, who has served as the president and chief executive officer of Post Communications and also held senior management positions at Sun Microsystems, will lead Apex Learning as the company enters its fifth year of providing online instructional content for high schools. Post Communications provides clients with customized marketing programs based on software tools that blend traditional database marketing with e-mail focused on specific consumers.

Vedoe's departure isn't coming at the most opportune time. Apple, which once dominated the education market, has seen its market share fall in recent months, especially to Dell Computer Corp. In the first quarter of 2000, Apple and Dell were in a head-to-head battle for dominance in the U.S. education market. Dell, who at the at time had 22.6 percent of the market saw steady increases in its market share growing to 34.9 percent in the latest research numbers given to MacCentral by market research firm, International Data Corp. (IDC).

Apple has seen some recent shakeups in its education division. The most recent change saw Vedoe assume the role of president of Apple's PowerSchool division in June. Apple brought in John Couch as vice president of education to head a combined education sales and marketing team. maccentral.macworld.com



To: Don Green who wrote (34948)9/18/2002 12:24:08 PM
From: Dan Fleuris  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 213172
 
Don, you cited a highly biased and misleading article:
When they report "Dell represents nearly 35% of all new sales to Apple's 15.2%. That's up from a low of 12.4% at the end of last year, but down sharply from Apple's 20.2% share two years ago" They make it sound like the end is near.
However, according to their cited numbers, Apple went from 20% to 12.4% (bad) but back up to 15.2% (comming back).
The issue is not Apple vs Dell. The issue is Apple vs PC. Most of Dell's market share growth has been at the expense of PCs and only some of it against Apple and according to the data cited, the hemorrhage has stopped, if not reversed. What's really key is this season's data. Does anyone know when we'll get information on that?
The departure of the vice president of education products and marketing, I agree, is worrisome. Was she the head of the education products & marketing, or was there someone between her and Jobs? I can never tell from the job titles
Whatever the case please, let's remember that this board consists of highly intelligent contributors and let's call a spade a spade.
Dan