Skip to content.

TalkBMC

Sections
You are here: Home » Blogs » whurley (William Hurley) » opensville » Hey HP, where's your software business? Oh, wait, I found it.

Hey HP, where's your software business?  Oh, wait, I found it. Hey HP, where's your software business? Oh, wait, I found it.

Document Actions
When I read the title of Carter Lusher's (director of the HP's Corporate Analyst Relations team) Monday blog post, I wished I'd come up with it myself: "How serious is HP about software?"

When I read the title of Carter Lusher's (director of the HP's Corporate Analyst Relations team) Monday blog post, I wished I'd come up with it myself: "How serious is HP about software?" Then I actually read the post, and it did a better job of making my case than I ever could. Check this excerpt:

In a recent meeting, while discussing HP's financial strength with a major customer's IT executives, I got a question/comment from the CIO. He stopped me, pointed to the thin slice of the earnings pie that is HP Software and asked "How serious is HP about software? That seems like an awfully small piece of your business." Yep, the slice that is HP Software (capital S) in our Q3 earnings is relatively tiny, 2 percent, but it only reflects the tip of the HP software (lowercase s) efforts.

So what you’re saying, Carter, is what we’ve been thinking for years: software isn’t important at HP. Maybe it’s by choice. Maybe software just isn’t one of your core competencies. Either way, I’d like to offer you this tidbit. If you’re a multi-billion dollar computer company, and software only accounts for 2% of your business (yes, I saw your “accounting issue” spin, good times), then what you really need is the proper visual to demonstrate your company’s commitment to software when speaking to analysts and members of the press. In the interest of coop-tition, here are some royalty-free graphics you can use in your next presentation:

Hey HP, where’s your software business?  Oh, wait, I found it.






Hey HP, where’s your software business?  Oh, wait, I found it.

Wow. Making 2 percent appear as visually important as Carter made it sound with his smooth fingers was harder than I thought. Still, I think these will spice up HP’s next earnings call and really hammer the message home, don’t you?




HP, You're On Notice | Slashdot It! | BarCampESM Wrap Up

Add to Technorati Favorites






_____
tags:
Friday, October 26, 2007  |  Permalink |  Comments (8)

Your point?

Posted by Cary King at 2007-11-21 20:53
I don't work or HP or any vendor.

But, perhaps you could be more explicit about your point?

You're suggesting that since HP is really an ink company, and that the software product business is a small portion of the revenue that something - unknown - will change? What?

IBM is now, in the majority, a consulting company. You're not really suggesting that they cannot also produce computers or software are you?

HP is an ink company. They also sell computers. And software.

So what?

and...

Posted by matt at 2007-11-25 12:28
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=BMC puts you @ 1.64 Billion in revenue.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=HPQ puts them @ 104.29 Billion in revenue.

So...they're still half a billion more at 2 percent. And BMC is 100% software. So does that mean BMC is just doing a horrible job? Ultimately these are just numbers. HP, similar to other large companies doesn't have singular focus on software...because they'd rather deliver a total solution to customers. Similar things could be said about IBM, Sun, etc.

The point of your rant is?

Posted by Ned at 2007-12-05 11:50
HP is a diversified company. What is the point of picking on their analyst relations guy? Doesn't BMC have better things to do? Don't you?

6 Billion just in the last year

Posted by doron at 2007-12-05 16:29
As HP just in the last year or so put 6 billion on software (mercury, Opsware, peregreene), I would say that hp are pretty much taking the software business as a very important ...

Be careful what you wish for...

Posted by Bob at 2008-01-22 07:45
Sometimes it's best to let sleeping dogs lie.

Charting HP Software Business

Posted by John Koenig at 2008-01-23 13:37
This <a href="http://compute-magazine.com/index.php/2007091936/FINANCE/Analysts-Quick-to-Compare-Dell-and-HP.html ">article</a> illustrates HP revenues pretty nicely.

Nice job taking my post out of context

Posted by Carter Lusher at 2008-06-15 22:55
I had to laugh out loud when I happen to come across your post today (6/15/08). Too bad I was in the process of leaving HP at the time and did not see your post, as it would have been fun engaging you blog-to-blog. Can't respond now because I am no longer an employee and it would not be appropriate to do so.

BTW, I can't seem to find a link to the original HP AR post in your post (maybe you did not want people to see how you artfully twisted the content) so here it is:

http://www.communities.hp.com/online/blogs/analystrelations/archive/2007/10/22/HPPost4816.aspx

Carter Lusher
SageCircle
www.sagecircle.wordpress.com

Hey HP where is your software business

Posted by Richard of Melbourne Australia at 2008-08-10 02:41
I am the ex Country Manager of Ospware and I now work for HP. My closest friend was the ex Presales manager for BMC in Australia. I am also a qualified Journalist and a published writer.

Do yourself a favour, it is better you be thought a fool than write soething down and prove it.
Really the problem with Blogs and the web is anyone thinks they can write and have a valued opinion, they can't.

Your litte comment here is white noise the size of a pimple on the bum of a small animal on our a planet. Small in comparison to real comment, analysis and truthful reporting.

Get a life and who ever you are related to at BMC I would counsel them to distance themselves from you. I mean really how do you think in "the court of public opinion" would anyone even listen let alone believe you.

whurley (William Hurley)

Subscribe to whurley's blog Subscribe to whurley's blog

Bio and Published Works

View blog authority
Email Alert: whurley's Blog

Get an email alert when I publish a new blog entry! Enter your email address:

 

Powered by Plone

This site conforms to the following standards: