Last year i2 strayed from the basics of selling planning and scheduling software used to run factories, and tried to slug it out with Ariba Inc. and Commerce One Inc. by selling technology to business-to-business E-marketplaces. Now that the market has tanked, i2 is trying to reverse its dismal financial performance by adding product capabilities that it hopes will appeal to current customers in manufacturing and attract new customers in the retail and financial-services industries.
Meta Group analyst Carl Lehman says large corporations looking to Web-enable their supply chain prefer to buy from one vendor, so i2's strategy may be appealing to them. But he was skeptical of i2's commitment to the financial-services industry, noting that the company has not hired executives with expertise in that market. "I don't know how strong they're really trying to play in that space," Lehman says. "You've got to have a significant commitment in terms of management capabilities and expertise, integration capabilities, and a strong platform that's targeted toward specific types of service solutions, and i2 only has the components." The financial backdrop to i2's product plans is reflected in the company's third quarter, ended Sept. 30. Revenue dropped nearly 20% from the second quarter to $194 million, and nearly 40% from the same period a year ago. License revenue dropped 36% to $68 million from the previous quarter's $106 million, and sales to existing customers plummeted 69% to $42.1 million. Not surprisingly, the company has started aggressive cost cutting, with plans to cut up to 1,000 jobs over the next two quarters. In refocusing on the core software modules that made i2 successful, the company will find a different market landscape--one in which advanced planning and scheduling products from enterprise resource planning vendors are much more mature than a year ago. In addition, competitor Manugistics Group Inc. has built a strong presence in the consumer products industry and won't give it up without a fight. "There is a lot banking on the release of this new functionality, and it may yet open up the largely untapped consumer products market for i2," AMR Research analysts John Fontanella and Gerald McNerney said in a recent report. "For now, i2's future relies on a reset of expectations, a successful launch of OMx, and a strong bite of crow."
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