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This is the widest range for any IT vendor in India, save distributors: PCs,
laptops, servers, storage, printers, supplies. Tying the picture together, the
past couple of years, have been services. Large annuity contracts from banks;
major projects executed at Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, UCO Bank and SBI; and
infrastructure in telecom and manufacturing.
The SMB area was hot too, helped by a micro-vertical focus: cooperative
banks, textiles, pharma, construction, auto-ancillaries, and BPO.
Along with the services mandate, it helped to have the two other divisions
with their own P&Ls, under key executives who focused on their product
categories: imaging and printing (IPG), and personal systems (PSG). To get to
some cross-leverage across the three divisions, a global focus on margin
improvement triggered some bundling (printer with PC, CDMA card with laptop,
storage with server...).
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Highlights |
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Infrastructure boom:
services, projects, OpenView. Superdome servers at 100
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SMB push through
microverticals, class B/C towns
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Channel champ; eleven
awards in IDC-DQ Channels survey
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l
Start-up Year: 1989 l
Products & services: Computer systems, services, printers l
Address: 24 Salarpuria Arena, Adugodi, Hosur Road, Bangalore 560030
l Tel: (80)
2563-3555 l Fax:
(80) 2563-3222 l
Website: www.hp.com/in |
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Strengths |
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Wide product and
services portfolio, annuity services base: BoB, BoI etc are among HP's
major global projects
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High margin services,
supplies, software
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Weaknesses |
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HP's PCs sold well in the BPO space, a traditional Dell stronghold, and in
government. Though with HP's 21,000 DGS&D PC sales, HCL was ahead, and
Lenovo not far behind. Retail was strong, through the Compaq and HP outlets.
Endorsements from Shahrukh Khan helped in smaller towns.
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| Balu Doraisamy, group
MD |
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Ravi Aggarwal,
imaging and printing
Ravi Swaminathan, personal systems
Kapil Jain, services
Zarir Batliwala, HR
NVP Tendulkar, finance |
HP dominates printers, and there were few players beyond Canon who really
competed. Samsung could fill some gaps in HP's entry laser range, but it was
recovering from a management shakeout. Xerox was mild. Epson was a no-show
beyond DMPs. To fill its laser gaps, HP pushed its business inkjets hard: with
separate ink tanks, they offered cheap and fast prints. They sold well, though
they caused some worries among the laser product teams. Overall, MFP and AIO
(multi function/all-in-one) products rapidly took over. And, of course, the
evergreen and profitable supplies, which brought in over Rs 700 crore. Page(s) 1
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