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Is Nortel veterans' call to save company falling on deaf ears?

Is Nortel veterans' call to save company falling on deaf ears?

By:  Nestor E Arellano and Greg Meckbach  On: 10 Jun 2009 For: ITWorldCanada.com(NA) Creator

A group led by former Nortel president Robert Ferchat is hoping to raise $1 billion to keep the company in Canadian hands and is asking the government to delay the sale of its assets

"Breaking up Nortel and selling off its parts to buyers will result in the loss of its flagship R&D centres and further loss of high-value tech jobs in Ottawa and other parts of the country," said Craig.

The former Nortel executive said the current management team led by CEO Mike Zafirovski has got it all wrong.

"Zafirovski is trying to drive the company through process, not innovation, which is the actual strength of Nortel," he said.

He said Zafirovski's background was in "selling consumer handsets" for Motorola and was ill-suited for the demands of promoting enterprise-grade telecom networking hardware.

"You can't run Nortel on 6 Sigma process alone. Sure, that worked for GE, but it took 15 years to gain traction. Nortel doesn't have that much time," Craig said.

Ferchat and his group are also lobbying for federal infrastructure money to finance the creation of a high-speed Internet network that will link the country's businesses, hospitals, schools and other institutions.

Ferchat envisions the network as a catalyst for economic growth and an opportunity to connect Canadians that live in remote areas. Australia, which has a vast geographic area, has deployed something similar and Alberta began something called the SuperNet project several years back.

The group proposes that the infrastructure be funded in part with Nortel's research and development tax credits.

“Japan has incredible program of taking gigabits of data to the home so that would mean you could deliver CATV and a whole bag of tricks," Fer








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Nestor E Arellano and Greg Meckbach Nestor E Arellano and Greg Meckbach is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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