Since then, HP's services business has grown to $16.6 billion in annual sales, but it has had little success parlaying the P&G victory into more whopper contracts, leaving it an also-ran in the market. The company's legendary garage-shop DNA didn't come with an outsourcing gene. CEO Mark Hurd tacitly admitted as much last week when he announced an agreement to buy EDS for $13.9 billion. "This fulfills our strategic objective of expanding in the services area," Hurd said.
The deal clearly gives HP's services business scale, HP CTO Shane Robison notes. "One of the things you need in the services business is people with a lot of vertical expertise and operational expertise," Robison says, adding that EDS is strong in the financial services, energy, health care, and government sectors. EDS would also give HP blue-chip customers such as American Airlines, Bank of America, and Royal Dutch Shell.
BRIDGE TO THE FUTURE
Hurd, of course, is optimistic. "The fact that we bring a $4 billion R&D stream and a research stream from HP Labs brings leverage into the business on a number of fronts," he said. And Robison insists that EDS isn't at all sclerotic. He points to EDS executive VP Charlie Feld, a former Delta Air Lines CIO who, he says, "has been talking a lot about software as a service and how to deliver more of their capabilities through SaaS and cloud-based infrastructures."
HP's hope is that big multinationals will look to outsourcers more than ever to collect, secure, integrate, and deliver software and other IT resources over the Web and guarantee "five nines" service levels. But true believers in SaaS and cloud computing envision those models making big system integrators like EDS obsolete, by removing complexity.
Architectural debates notwithstanding, the proposed merger is mostly about HP's belief that it can squeeze out more profits by consolidating operations and reducing overhead. In a services market that perennially coughs up low profit margins, EDS has done worse than average. In its fiscal fourth quarter, for example, EDS posted an operating margin of 7.3%, compared with the 11% most recently reported by rival Accenture. The campaign to make EDS more profitable would inevitably include job cuts. "There are always job adjustments" during a merger, Rittenmeyer says.
The ax likely will fall in other areas, too. "We know a lot about how to look at overhead and how to look at costs that result from overhead," Hurd said. "So think of us trying very hard to run the playbook that we think we know how to run very well." Hurd's credibility comes from the financial turnaround he has driven at HP, whose stock price has more than doubled over the last 18 months.
EDS has already been through several rounds of layoffs and facilities closures in recent years, so achieving savings without cutting too deeply could be tricky. If Hurd goes too far, customer service could suffer. Hurd maintains that automation tools for server and storage management, including HP's own Opsware, allow data center operators to get by with fewer staffers without hurting services levels. "The cool thing about a services business is that as you extract cost, you actually increase service levels as you automate," he said.
But can HP's culture bridge a computer and printer company with a history of treating services as a poor relation, with an outsourcer not far removed from the old-school ways of cavernous data centers staffed by legions of techies? The new organization must be capable of embracing new-wave IT trends such as cloud computing and software as a service that call into question what outsourcers do.
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Hurd sticks to the playbook![]()
Photo by Kimberly White/Bloomberg News/Landov![]()
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