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To: faro who wrote (24513)5/3/1999 9:01:00 AM
From: Richard Habib  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 213177
 
3COm will not sell the Palm Pilot Division, their crown jewel. For those that follow it, 3Com's stock has collapsed on perceived competition with Intel. Someone mentioned Intel buying 3Com. Not likely. Intel already has most of what 3Com does.

Apple has given no indication they want to produce a MacMate type device. They are having a hell of a time producing enough of the 3 main products they have now, let alone the PB refresh and P1. If anything, they may make an agreement with 3COm to have 3Com produce a Mac version of the Palm Pilot.
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3Com: It's a Palm, Palm world
By Ben Heskett and Wylie Wong
Staff Writers, CNET News.com
April 29, 1999, 1:00 p.m. PT
news analysis SAN FRANCISCO--Struggling 3Com may have either latched its future to the next big thing in computing or doomed its fortunes faster than a future wireless version of its PalmPilot will connect to the Net.

The networking technology provider is charting a course that largely depends on the success of its Palm Computing division to drive sales of its other higher-margin products, such as its networking devices for small and medium-sized businesses and remote access hardware.

"Palm has a very central place in the future because not only does it illustrate what we stand for very nicely, but also it's a very successful business," said Eric Benhamou, 3Com's chairman and chief executive, in an interview with News.com.

But unlike a company such as Microsoft, 3Com can ill-afford to make strategic blunders and fight battles on multiple fronts. Redmond can fiddle with various side businesses like Internet content, knowing that sales of its core operating system will continue to drive profits. 3Com, however, doesn't have that luxury.

Benhamou said 3Com currently has too much revenue coming from mature businesses.

The firm derives 45 percent of its sales from older niches, like networking cards, and another 45 percent from existing growth businesses, like network switching. Yet only 10 percent of the company's revenue comes from emerging opportunities, the chief executive said. Looking ahead, Benhamou said he wanted 3Com's so-called mature products to account for only 25 percent of revenues.

At stake here is the future of 3Com, which was once thought to be a toe-to-toe competitor to industry titans like Cisco Systems, the Bay Networks arm of Nortel Networks, and Cabletron Systems. As Cisco got bigger and Bay got bought, 3Com just tread water, seemingly unsure of which direction to go.

While 3Com's rivals jump into the telecommunications equipment fray, the company is focusing on the consumer market as it attempts to shed its mature businesses in favor of emerging opportunities.

The result will likely be a far different 3Com. The company plans to utilize its lead in handheld computing devices to emphasize other technology, similar, Benhamou said, to the way Sun Microsystems used its Java programming language to drive sales of its back-end systems. The company has even struck aggregation deals with Net content providers and plans to gain revenue from Web advertising in a bid to attract a wider audience to its PalmPilot technology.

"We're the only one that has really connected users. This is really what the soul of the company is about," the chief executive said. "And you're going to see this more and more in how we choose to position the company and how we choose to orient the future of our business."


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At one point during the executive's News.com visit, Benhamou even pointed to one part of the PalmPilot interface and said: "This is worth $25 million" to advertisers. To illustrate his point further, the executive went to a white board and drew a chart of possible rates for various types of ads, pointing to them as 1-cent, 25-cent, and $1 revenue opportunities--a striking pose for a veteran networking player.

Wall street fallout
3Com has been on a roller coaster ride since early 1997 when the firm's stock plunged during a price war with Intel over adapter and network interface cards. The troubles also coincided with company's purchase of US Robotics, the genesis of the company's Palm-oriented evolution.

The stock has fluctuated following a series of inventory problems and sales concerns, yet jumped early this year amid speculation that numerous players might be interested in the company, including Lucent Technologies and Siemens.

The chief executive, however, refused to comment on the acquisition rumors concerning 3Com. He also dismissed the notion that 3Com would spin off its Palm division.

As a measure of the company's plight, 3Com has a market capitalization of more than $9 billion after 20 years in the networking business. Yet Net newbies like Yahoo and Amazon both have valuations of more than $25 billion.

To remedy recent woes, 3Com has said it would reduce its investment in mature businesses, such as client access, analog modems, and mobile networking card groups, and focus on emerging growth opportunities in home networking, broadband access, and Internet-based voice technology.