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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Novell's Linux makeover By Stephen Shankland, CNET News.com February 17, 2005 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/insight/software/soa/Novell-s-Linux-makeover/0,139023769,139181511,00.htm
The Novell CEO began an ambitious Linux overhaul of his company in 2003, acquiring SuSE Linux to provide an alternative to the fading NetWare operating system. Since then, the company has released a major new Linux edition, revamped sales, dropped its No. 2 executive and prepared a new version of NetWare: Open Enterprise Server, which comes with Linux built in. The Linux transformation is going well but not completely as planned, Messman acknowledged. Among other things, Novell hasn't had the success it wanted in North America, where SuSE Linux trails rival Red Hat. Messman's assessment of that weakness -- and some progress fixing it -- is borne out by a recent survey of 440 North American information technology managers published in January by securities firm SG Cowen. In a comparison of the percentage of sites that rely on different versions of Linux, Red Hat slipped from 86 percent in 2003 to 72 percent from November 2003 to January 2005, while Novell gained from 21 percent to 33 percent over the same period. Messman, 64, has been a Novell board member since 1985 -- Novell's glory days selling NetWare -- and became president and CEO when Novell bought his company, Cambridge Technology Partners, in 2001. He sat down with CNET News.com after his keynote address at the LinuxWorld Conference and Expo here.
Q: How would you assess the Linuxisation of Novell?
We got a little bit of DNA from Ximian and SuSE that has permeated our entire company. Now we've started to cross-fertilise. We had a few emotional wars early on with KDE and GNOME (two competing graphical user interfaces). We solved that by putting them both in the Novell desktop and letting the customers decide.
So you think it's been good culturally and technologically. How has it been from the business side?
But how are you doing on revenue?
One of the goals of the SuSE acquisition was to combine it with Novell's marketing power in North America to take on Red Hat. How is SuSE doing in North America now?
The best advertising we did last year was the acquisition of SuSE Linux. Now we're in the process of bringing out the differentiators. The SuSE Linux kernel (the heart of Linux) is the same for everybody, so the question is what do you have that makes the difference? We've got worldwide service, we've got a consulting organisation, a software stack with file and print and messaging and directory, we offer indemnity that Red Hat can't offer, because we used to own Unix. And we have a patent portfolio they don't have. We've been gaining every month. The progress hasn't been as good as I liked. Pricing has come down, so we don't see the growth that we would have. We've signed some (computer maker) partners, and it takes a while for them to get to speed. The number of software partners increased significantly from 46 in 2003 to 531 in 2004. We have 1,100 applications certified on SuSE Linux. With our sales force, we've reorganised how we go to market. We were focused on maintaining the revenue stream from NetWare. Now we're focused on selling new stuff like Linux and identity management. We're in the middle of a two-year transition in our sales force. And the channel (sales partners) is really interested in Linux. They made a lot of money switching NetWare customers to Windows customers. Now they're interested in switching Windows customers to Linux customers.
You don't seem eager to enter the embedded Linux market (for computing devices such as mobile phones or slot machines).
Are you thinking of acquiring an embedded Linux company?
Did you look at MontaVista?
What happened with the departure of Chris Stone (Novell's former vice chairman and top Linux executive) last year?
What was the difference of opinion?
Are you looking for a chief operating officer or a replacement for yourself?
There are always going to be succession issues. We are always looking. We have some executive capabilities we need; some skills we lack. Novell has never been strong in the marketing area. We saw that and added Bill Hewitt. We want to remain profitable, so we're not going to go adding helter-skelter new people or expenses. I'm not going to deny we're looking for executives, but I would be lying to say we have a specific thing we're looking to do.
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