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


To: Rob McClacherty who wrote (4929)3/17/1998 1:34:00 PM
From: Wizzer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9798
 
I suppose the "once bitten, twice shy" principle applies to Corel's new way of talking. I would rather hear that kind of news release and be pleasantly surpised if it turns out better, than a promising news release and be disappointed. Of course, if profits are eroded in the future then at least we were forewarned.



To: Rob McClacherty who wrote (4929)3/17/1998 2:08:00 PM
From: Leo Mitkievicz  Respond to of 9798
 
Rob

Thanks for the article. I will post a link to it on the "No Humor" thread.

I find it interesting that Cowpland has become so understated in his comments. a "difficult year" indeed. Nice choice of word. Beats the devil out of his typical hyperbole.

Leo



To: Rob McClacherty who wrote (4929)3/18/1998 1:45:00 PM
From: Mr. Coffee  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9798
 
Price Wars...What Price Wars?!

Has anybody noticed that neither of Corel's primary competitors have ever "stooped" to competing on price? Neither Microsoft or Adobe have lowered their prices in response to Corel's pricing pressures, preferring instead to maintain pricing/margin integrity (and increasing shareholder wealth in the process)!

Competing on price is a losing proposition.

Has anybody asked what effect this drop in price at retail will have on Corel's enterprise licensing revenues? Enterprise licensing is a highly profitable play (no disks/dox = $0 effective Cost of Goods). Can you imagine a corporation paying more than $25 seat for WP8 when they can go to egghead.com (or Corel's own website for that matter) and order full box product, with disks/dox for $79.99.

What does a box of $79.99 software sell into distribution at? Around $55. What is the cost of goods on this (packaging, media, manuals, 3rd party royalties, etc.)? What is the gross margin to Corel on this?? My guess is somewhere around $25. With Corel's propensity for spending on advertising, and with no announced layoffs, it's not hard to see why there's not enough money generated in terms of margins to go around...(I thought they had a hot-shot new CFO?? Maybe a basic course in cost accounting would go along ways...Come to think of it, so would Marketing 101!)

The Board of Directors needs to realize that the Emperor has no clothes, nor does any of the supporting cast, if this is the kind of knee-jerk strategies that continue to be implemented.

It's a long way from the pricing that WordPerfect (or competing applications) have historically commanded.