Tish Williams
Author of Its Own Ruin; Biographer of Its Competitors'
Most tech companies in 2001 could blame the massive IT spending slowdown for wrecking their businesses. Handheld maker Palm PALM, which lives in the consumer-oriented PDA domain, couldn't do that. Palm had to ruin its business all by itself. Early in 2001, Palm did just that, locking itself into expensive component contracts, then bungling the rollout of its new m500 family of handhelds by announcing the new models but not having them ready for months. Since March, Palm has scrambled to clear out products any way possible. Unfortunately, that involved reducing prices dramatically, which spurred a price war with alumni-run competitor Handspring HAND. This moved handhelds off the shelves -- but at the expense of revenue. Palm will bring in an estimated $982 million in revenue in fiscal 2002, a far cry from the $1.6 billion it reaped in fiscal 2001. Finally, the PDA makers' declining returns laid waste to both companies' share prices, as Palm's stock plunged 84% on the year and Handspring's sank 81%.| Hands Down Handheld makers' revenue decline |
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| Company/Period | 2Q | 3Q | 4Q* | 1Q** |
| Palm | $522M | $471M | $165M | $214M |
| Handspring | $116M | $124M | $61M | $61M |
| Source: Company press releases. *Estimate. **Fiscal 2002 estimate. | ||||
Never Saw a Pro Forma Adjustment It Didn't Like
Motorola MOT didn't let 2001's massive restructuring effort or a dip into the red after decades of profitability change its combative attitude toward Wall Street.| Special Indeed Special charges at Motorola |
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| Year/Period | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 |
| 2000 | $39M | $355M | $144M | $68M |
| 2001 | $279M | $496M | $2B | t.b.a. |
| Source: Company press releases | ||||
Cutting Off Your Nose to Save Face
Dell DELL was one of the few tech winners in 2001, with a stock price increase of 67%. But those gains come at the expense of an entire industry's health. The secret to Dell's progress has been a drastic strategy in which it slashed prices on PCs below its competitors' level of tolerance. Consumers dropped their jaws over sub-$1,000 computers in 2000; how could they have imagined they'd be treated to $600 computers in 2001?| Decline and Fall Change in third-quarter PC shipments* |
|
| Dell | 10.8% |
| Compaq | -31.1 |
| IBM | -17.2 |
| Hewlett-Packard | -24.6 |
| NEC | -27.5 |
| Source: Gartner Dataquest (October 2001). *Against a year ago. | |
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