Hewlett-Packard is splitting in two.
As the company announced
on Monday, it will soon separate into two publicly traded companies.
One company, Hewlett-Packard Enterprise, will focus on cloud computing
services and other tools for businesses, while the second, HP Inc., will
handle personal computers and printers.
In a statement on the split, CEO Meg Whitman, who joined the
struggling tech giant in 2011, said that dividing the company in two
will make both halves more agile and therefore stronger. “The decision
to separate into two market-leading companies underscores our commitment
to the turnaround plan,” said Whitman. When the split is completed in
October 2015, she will become CEO of the enterprise business, while Dion
Weisler, who now leads the company’s printing operations, will become
CEO of HP Inc.
This division is a sign of the times for some of the country’s most
established hardware companies. Sales of PCs and printers have dwindled
in recent years, due in part to the rise of smartphones and tablets.
Meanwhile, the rise of cloud computing services such as Amazon Web
Services—which let businesses rent computing power over the internet—has
undermined the market for computer servers, data storage gear, and
other data center hardware. As a result, the giants of the computer
hardware business have been forced to rethink their strategies.
Late last year, Dell founder Michael Dell took the company private,
hoping he could revive the business if relieved of the pressures of
being a publicly traded company. Back in 2004, IBM sold off its PC
business to Lenovo, and earlier this year, it sold off its low-end server business—again to Lenovo—in an effort to shed some of its reliance on hardware.
In splitting itself in two—and investing more heavily in its own
cloud computing services—Hewlett-Packard is fighting much the same
battle, as it seeks to retain its relevance in the face of competition
from the likes of Amazon, Google, and others. Recently, HP acquired Eucalyptus,
a startup that lets companies build cloud computing services in their
own data centers. With Eucalyptus, companies can keep some of their data
in private cloud services for security reasons or otherwise, while also
using public cloud services to run their software applications. A
reflection of its larger strategy, this is a move that HP hopes will
help fuel its growth in the cloud computing space, which will be an
explicit goal of its new enterprise business.
This is not the first time Hewlett-Packard has considered a split
under Whitman’s watch, and yet, back in 2011, she rejected the idea of
spinning off the company’s PC business, noting that the two parts
bolstered each other. Now, it seems that Whitman, like others in the
industry, has adopted the belief that the nimbler a company is, the
stronger it will be. In other words, if the company isn’t saddled by its
PC and printers businesses, it has more room to innovate and build new
products and services for a new age.
In an interview with CNBC
Monday, Whitman acknowledged the shift in her thinking, saying that the
split was only possible because the turnaround Whitman architected has
succeeded. “We had to gather ourselves as one HP,” she said, “but now
we’re in the position to take advantage of what’s going on in the
marketplace and position these two companies for growth.”