Hewlett-Packard is officially splitting in two. Following rumors over the weekend,
HP is announcing today that it will separate its PC and printer
division from its enterprise and services business.
The split means
current CEO Meg Whitman will become the chairman of the PC and printer
operation, and continue as CEO of the split-off enterprise business.
Dion Weisler, an executive at HP’s PC business, will take over as CEO of
the company’s PC and printer operation.
HP Enterprise is the newly split-off part of the original
company, and HP Inc will continue to focus on PCs and printers. "The
decision to separate into two market-leading companies underscores our
commitment to the turnaround plan," says HP CEO Meg Whitman. "It will
provide each new company with the independence, focus, financial
resources, and flexibility they need to adapt quickly to market and
customer dynamics, while generating long-term value for shareholders."
HP is planning to complete the split by the end of fiscal 2015.
Today’s split is a significant change for the company, following rumors from 2011 that HP was considering a similar split at the time. Those reports surfaced shortly before HP appointed Meg Witman as CEO,
just 11 months after former CEO Leo Apotheker took over from Mark Hurd
after he was forced to resign amidst charges of inappropriate business
conduct. Apotheker spearheaded a disastrous acquisition of Autonomy, and failed to capitalize on the company’s purchase of webOS.
Whitman’s era at HP has seen the company struggle to
cement a solid position in the industry, leaving Lenovo to dominate PC
sales worldwide. Whitman’s initial assessment of the company after
around six months left her feeling it was "too complex and too slow,"
noting it had underinvested in its PC division. Instead of significant
investment, Whitman claimed in 2012 that the company had to offer a
smartphone, before failing to announce one
in 2013. Board members reportedly mulled spinning off the company’s
consumer PC business in 2013, but it never happened. HP has recently
focused on Android tablets, and even an Android laptop, after describing Microsoft as an "outright competitor."
A new HP says it will focus on "new computing experiences"
and technologies like 3D printing. "As the market leader in printing
and personal systems, an independent HP Inc. will be extremely well
positioned to deliver that innovation across our traditional markets as
well as extend our leadership into new markets like 3-D printing and new
computing experiences -- inventing technology that empowers people to
create, interact and inspire like never before," says Dion Weisler, head
of HP's Printing and Personal Systems business.
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