Tag Archives: Business

How to attain profitablity

The slew of recent settlements appears to be paving the way for court room financial quarters. Infact, with Microsoft settling most of the pending law suits, a number of companies have managed to bounce back into profitable quarters.

For example, does this equation hold true for Gateway’s recent $150 million antitrust settlement with Microsoft?

Gateway/ EMachines Quarterly Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold – Operating Expenses + 150/16 = Profitable Quarter

Is Symantec Growing Too Fast?

Back in July 2004, I posted a blog on how I thought that Symantec was reaching a point of omnipresence in the technology market. With the recent merger with Veritas Software, Symantec has definitely grown a tad larger. Are customers suffering as a result of this?

Charles Cooper’s recent experience with support from Symantec may be a sign of what happens when you’re growing faster than the number of customers you can actually satisfy. In my opinion without customer satisfaction you’re looking at imminent losses in market share. I guess outsourcing support to India doesn’t always result in lower costs to the consumer.

Destroy the Enterprise

Chapter 2 of Tom Peter’s book titled Re-Imagine, introduces the concept of the destruction imperative. In this chapter, Tom argues that the American economy is driven by destroying jobs in old large enterprises and rebuilding new jobs in novell ventures.

Unisys Stories

Just heard that Unisys shares dropped 15% on the warning that they would not meet prior forecasts.

I interned at Unisys last year and definitely felt that the company offered the end to end solution from hardware/ software to outsourcing. Sadly, it seems that the company has trouble distinguishing itself from other consulting offerings.

The stock plunge as reported by Investors.com is a bit strange since the company has just been ramping up a strong portfolio of security related services (i.e ePresence Security Services and Baesch Computer Consulting).

Unisys announced today that its second quarter earning slid by 63% and earned 19.4 million dollars, or six cents a share, on revenue of 1.4 billion dollars.