The Things Novell Does Not Want You to Know
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2007-03-27 02:58:13 UTC
- Modified: 2007-03-27 03:13:43 UTC
While Novell would like you to believe that it has found prosperity in its controversial deal,
truth suggests otherwise.
What Was Right--and Wrong--With Novell Brainshare
[...]
6. Novell Business Claims (Miss): Careful here, Novell. Your marketing videos poke fun at Apple and Windows , and state that Linux has 30 million users. Perhaps. But only a fraction of those users are running Novell's version of Linux. Also, your event guide states that Novell is a $1 billion company. In reality, Novell's revenue for 2006 was $967 million. If there's another $33 million floating around somewhere, shareholders would certainly love to see it.
Now, consider this: Earlier this month, Novell was quietly making office space available for rent, stirring up rumours
that layouts are inevitable. Would you really want to put your money on a company that seemingly implodes?
But here is another possibility: Have you heard about Intel's layoffs of 10,000 staff? Or IBM's layoffs of 13,000 European staff last year? Intel is currently
building a $2.5-billion center in China and IBM recently created 14,000 new jobs in India. This is by no means criticism of offshoring, but merely a word of warning. Novell could fit in this puzzle as well. Consider support jobs in Novell's Mumbai Centre. People who reside overseas can truly help Novell's margins. And that is
where certification has just been obtained.
Novell Mumbai Centre Gets SCP Certification
[...]
"Novell is the only Linux distributor to have this level of global capability. Now, Novell grows even stronger with the addition of the Mumbai centre," said Mike Lyons, vice president, global support and services, Novell.
Comments
Ian
2007-03-27 17:25:58
The VAR Guy
2007-03-28 03:24:37
Best,
Roy Schestowitz
2007-03-28 04:11:57