HP to Cut 7% of Workforce
HPs once sterling printing arm has also fallen off over the past several years. In 2011, printing division profits fell 10 percent while sales were flat. So poorly has the printing business performed that a large portion of the planned job cuts are to come from the unit. In March, HP merged its printing division into the broader “personal systems” divisions which includes PCs. As an indicator of the company’s desperation, it had even considered spinning off its business-critical PC division but eventually decide to keep it.
But as the world continues its march toward mobile technologies, PCs are being left behind and HP has fallen behind with introducing viable tablets or smartphones. While CEO Meg Whitman can act to shrink and realign the organization, major prospects for the future of the company may not arise without drastic changes. HP began its downward spiral in mid-2010 when it cut 9,000 jobs and jettisoned its webOS lineup. But that attempt failed to work, casting doubt that the current strategy may again fail to return the company to health. Profits at HP are expected to fall 26 percent this quarter with a continued downward trend expected throughout the rest of the year.