Sun Microsystems on Friday said it would cut its workforce
by as much as 18% in an attempt to realign its operations to deal
with the economic downturn that has contributed to sagging sales,
particularly in the company's high-end server business.
In addition, Sun laid out organizational changes that shift the
company's focus to its newer businesses in open source software,
including the Solaris operating system and MySQL, a popular
database. The company also has been moving its storage business
toward products that integrate open source software with hardware
in a strategy the company calls "open storage."
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The co-authors of Sun said it would reduce its workforce by
5,000 to 6,000 employees, or by 15% to 18%. The cuts were expected
to reduce costs by $700 million to $800 million annually, starting
in its next full quarter. However, the reduction would cost Sun
from $500 million to $600 million in one-time costs over the next
12 months.
"Today, we have taken decisive actions to align Sun's business with
global economic realities and accelerate our delivery of key open
source platform innovations -- from MySQL to Sun's latest Open
Storage offerings," Jonathan Schwartz, chief executive of Sun, said
in a statement.
The job cuts followed a $1.68 billion loss in Sun's fiscal first
quarter ended in September. In addition, Sun has seen its stock
price plummet, reaching its lowest level in more than 14 years on
Thursday at $3.50 per share. The company's market value is slightly
more than $3 billion, compared with $120 billion in the beginning
of the decade, when Sun was still flying high from the Internet
boom.
Sun's financial woes started with the dot-com bust in 2000 that
saw many of its customers go out of business. Sun at the time was a
major supplier of high-end servers to power Web applications. Sun
is also a major supplier of servers to Wall Street and the banking
industry, which has faced major upheaval as a result of the recent
home mortgage crisis. Sun reported a 20% drop in sales to banking
and investment firms in the last full quarter.
To try and pull itself out of its current financial troubles,
Sun is realigning its business around new computer systems that are
tightly integrated with Sun software. As a result of the changes,
Sun on Friday said that Rich Green, executive VP for software since
2006, will leave the company, and the company's software operations
would be divided among two new groups: an applications platform
division headed by executive VP Anil Gadre and a cloud computing
and developer platforms division headed by senior VP Dave Douglas.
What's left of Green's software operations will be folded into the
company computer systems division run by executive VP John
Fowler.