Novell lays off 100 workers

By Eric Lai, Computerworld |  Business, layoff, Novell 2 comments

Open-source vendor Novell Inc. on Saturday confirmed reports that it had a layoff on Friday, though it said the layoffs were small and amounted to less than 3% of its workforce.

Novell spokesman Ian Bruce said the company laid off 100 out of 4,200 employees worldwide. He declined to say if the move came in response to slumping sales at the Waltham, Mass. firm.

The number of layoffs cited by Brice is far smaller than the numbers bouncing around the Web Friday night. Cnet blogger Matt Asay, for instance, reported that Novell had cut up to 1,000 employees, citing an inside source who claimed that "basically an across-the-board reduction of 25 percent" was made.

The layoff was also mentioned by a pair of Twitter messages, including one from an apparent Novell employee.

For its most recent fiscal year 2008 ending Oct. 31, Novell lost US$18 million on revenue of $957 million.

During a Dec. 4 conference call with Wall Street analysts, CEO Ron Hovsepian said the company was committed to achieving profitability, and that job cuts might be necessary if sales slumped. "I think we are just evaluating at this point any additional restructures or activities that may take place in 2009 and those would be largely dependent on the overall economic condition and its impact to our revenues, if any," he said at the time.

Novell has had repeated layoffs and restructuring over the past decade. It laid off 10% of its workforce, or 600 employees, in November 2005, and 900 employees, or 16% of its workforce, back in September 2000.

Novell had also just finished a two-year restructuring plan at the end of October that saw it incur $76 million in expenses, much of it for laid-off employee severance, according to an SEC filing.

Though headquartered in the Boston suburbs after its merger with Cambridge Technology Partners in 2001, most of Novell's employees work in Provo, Utah, where it owns 887,000 square feet of office space.

In December, Novell canceled its long-running BrainShare conference in Salt Lake City for the first time in 20 years, citing slashed travel budgets among its IT customers.

2 comments

    Anonymous 2 years ago
    全国どこでも引越しのお手伝い、即お見積り。大阪でのリフォームはお任せ下さい。安心の丁寧が自慢のリフォーム会社です。パチンコ・パチスロをする前にパチンコ必勝法を手に入れろ。基礎学力テストで自分の学力を知ろう。あなたの目指す資格は資格 ランキングの上位に位置しています。アラサー・アラフォーの婚活を応援、お見合いパーティーに参加すれば、良い出会いが待っている。今からは激安旅行の時代、安くて良い思い出のたくさん出来る激安旅行。
    Anonymous 3 years ago
    Before I did not even think at least once in my life about the safety of my job in this economy. For the first time, I feel like no one’s job is safe especially that we are suffering from economic hit because of credit slumps and other related financial problems. Being laid off is the scariest thing I could ever imagine. I certainly don’t want to be coping and surviving unemployment, I’m sure it will be very hard. Mass layoff has been working on companies recently, and that worries me a lot. The latest round of mass layoffs comes from Silicon Valley and multinational chemical giant, Dow Chemicals. The latest round of mass layoffs comes from Silicon Valley and multinational chemical giant, Dow Chemicals. To read more about this please click on your no fax payday loan source.

      Add a comment

      Post a comment using one of these accounts
      Or join now
      At least 6 characters

      Note: Comment will appear soon after you have activated your account.
      Obscene/spam comments will be removed and accounts suspended.
      The information you submit is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

      ITworld LIVE

      BusinessWhite Papers & Webcasts

      White Paper

      Insiders Can Ruin Your Company. Take Action.

      Did you know that 80 percent of threats to an organization come from the inside? The threat from insiders is often overlooked in organizations worldwide. This white paper from NetIQ, discusses key technology solutions that help to prevent and detect insider threats.

      White Paper

      Ten Steps to an Enterprise Mobility Strategy

      Enterprise employees are more mobile, relishing the ability to work productively anywhere, at any time. They may use any means to get connected, often creating financial and security risks for your company. Discover how to get control of your enterprise mobility strategy and ensure mobile worker productivity with these ten steps.

      White Paper

      What You Need to Know About the Costs of Mobility

      Mobile workers want to get connected anywhere, at any time, often at any cost. Enterprise mobility is often a hidden "black" budget in your company. Ensure that your traveling employees are productive everywhere, even while you control cost and security, through an enterprise mobility strategy.

      White Paper

      The 2011 iPass Mobile Enterprise Report

      This industry survey covers trends, recommendations and a policy guide on managing Enterprise Mobility for IT management and CIOs. Get data on employee device liability, as well as smartphone/tablet penetration, budget control and provisioning. Find out how your organization compares, how to ensure mobile worker productivity, and control costs.

      White Paper

      Smarter Commerce is redefining value chain visibility

      Smarter Commerce is redefining the value chain in the age of the customer. It starts with putting the customer at the center of your operations - which of itself is not a new idea - however, truly operationalizing this strategy is not easy.

      See more White Papers | Webcasts

      Answers - Powered by ITworld

      Ask a question

      Ask a Question