Despite years of upheaval that caused some to wonder about 3Com Corp.โs commitment to its enterprise customers, the network gear makerโs executives say their company aims to impress jaded Canadians with new products and a novel marketing mantra. We want to be the leader in secure, converged networks in the enterprise.Bruce Claflin>Text
In an interview at 3Com Live, the network manufacturerโs meeting place for partners and customers (held in Las Vegas from March 9 to 11), CEO Bruce Claflin said 3Com would use its ever-widening product portfolio to impress businesses seeking new connectivity hardware and software.
โWe want to be the leader in secure, converged networks in the enterprise,โ Claflin said, pointing out that equipment like the recently shipped-to-market Switch 8800 for Terabit connectivity and new business arrangements such as 3Comโs acquisition of intrusion prevention system provider TippingPoint Technologies Inc. early this year should help the company reach that goal.
But itโs going to take some work to convince people that 3Com should be their go-to vendor for secure voice, data and wireless equipment, noted James Freeze, the firmโs vice-president, global marketing. He said one of 3Comโs major challenges has to do with getting the message out that the company offers much of the networking equipment required for secure, device-agnostic connectivity.
โWe could do a better job of educating all constituents,โ he said, adding that โa fairly substantial re-branding campaign is on the wayโ this fall in order to spread the word that 3Com offers wireless, wireline, data and voice technologies, as well as a mix of any of those network offerings.
If 3Comโs execs sound sure of themselves, it contrasts mightily with the way the firm conducted business over the past few years. 3Comโs history is full of ups and downs stemming from one oddball decision circa 2000.
Back then the firm announced it would pull out of the enterprise arena and focus on the small- to mid-sized business (SMB) and carrier markets. It discontinued its CoreBuilder switches, which were meant for enterprises.
The pullback annoyed some customers. โWhen we had upgraded the [CoreBuilder] 9000s, we anticipated that 3Com would be in this business for a long time,โ said Tony Crognale, a network technician at Arizona-based Scottsdale Insurance, during an interview in 2001. โIt wasnโt but 30 to 60 days after we switched overโฆthat 3Com announced their plans. This threw a wrench in the works.โ
(The decision also profoundly impacted a Canadian institution, although it seems there are no hard feelings. See accompanying article.)
But since then 3Com has been working to re-establish itself in the enterprise sector. In 2001 it created the Business Connectivity Company to serve all sizes of businesses with LAN, wireless and IP PBX technology.
In 2003 it introduced the Switch 7700 as an upgrade for CoreBuilder customers.
It sold pieces of its carrier equipment division โ something of a surprise from a firm bent on impressing network service providers just three years earlier.
In 2003 3Com entered a joint venture with Huawei Technologies, a network gear maker in China, to further develop enterprise equipment. And thereโs the TippingPoint acquisition, which provides the crucial embedded security element of 3Comโs secure convergence play. โItโs probably a smart move, given the attention security as a whole is getting with enterprise customers,โ said Roberta Fox, senior partner of Fox Group Consulting, an IT advisory firm in Markham, Ont.
But last year 3Com laid off its Canadian country manager less than six months after hiring him. This March 3Com laid off 220 employees in an effort to cut research and development costs and product management expenses.
Regardless of the undulations, 3Comโs execs say the business is on track.
Claflin said the enterprise bailout is โancient history.โ So much has changed since then. 3Com has beefed up its IP phone platforms to keep abreast of new networking standards. Its wireless gear is coming on strong too. In all the company has more to offer now that it did before, and itโs dedicated to the enterprise, according to Claflin.
And now 3Comโs former fans are returning for network upgrades. โThe CoreBuilder customers are the leading cause of business today,โ Claflin said.
Fox pointed out that 3Com might have been prescient to exit the enterprise when it did, in around 2000. โIn the last four or five years people havenโt been doing massive infrastructure projects anyway. If there were ever a time your absence wouldnโt be noticed, it would probably be then.โ
Bill Farkas, co-ordinator of Sheridan Collegeโs Telecommunications Technology Program in Oakville, Ont., said 3Com had its fortune-telling goggles on, and sidestepped the telecom equipment market bubble burst of 2001.
โEverybody was growing at an almost terrifying rate. The mergers and acquisitions were almost every day in the papers. Stocks were going up. All of a sudden 3Com says theyโre pulling the pin on it. It was almost anti-corporate. But in some ways, it was bright. They managed to avoid the pop.โ
But with no Canadian country manager on the payroll now, how does 3Com expect to convince Canuck customers that the firm is committed to this country?
Claflin pointed out that Nick Tidd, 3Com Canadaโs former leader, continues to play an important role here, even though he now runs the vendorโs partner program.
โI am sensitive to the Canadian market,โ Claflin said.
3Comโs executives also said the workforce reductions announced earlier this month wouldnโt impact actual R&D output. They said some R&D duties have been ported over to the Huawei team โ shuffled but not gone.
โI see us pushing up the pace of product introductions leveraging the [3Com-Huawei] joint venture,โ said Hilton Nicholson, 3Comโs senior vice-president, product operations.
Perhaps itโs no surprise that 3Com, over the course of five years, changed its mind so drastically about where it should focus its efforts โ twice. Fox said vendors are quick to switch tactics these days โ enter new sectors, abandon old ones, amend their selling methods, etc. โIt used to be a vendor would stick to the plan for three to five years. Now itโs maybe one year, or one to three years.โ
But sometimes itโs important to stay the course, she said. After all, โit takes time to see the results of the strategy.โ
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