Nortel needs new leaders to helm ship

Struggling networking and software vendor Nortel Networks Corp. will be looking for successors to replace its CEO, who is retiring next year and its chief operating officer who has quit.

Nortel, said John Roth, CEO of the Brampton, Ont., company, will retire next April. It added that chief operating officer (COO) Clarence Chandran has resigned effective immediately for health reasons.

In February, the telecommunications equipment supplier’s chief technology officer, Bill Hawe, resigned and was replaced by Jules Meunier, who was president of Nortel’s core network division. The company wouldn’t disclose why Hawe resigned.

Nortel also said it was exiting the DSL access business to concentrate on higher-growth markets.

Chandran, currently on medical leave from the company, has resigned to take additional time to complete his recovery from stab wounds suffered in an assault four years ago.

Chandran had been on leave since March to recuperate from wounds suffered in an attack in Singapore in June 1997. Chandran has also resigned his seat on Nortel’s board.

Said Chandran in a statement: “I am advised by my doctors that my medical leave of absence, while progressing well, will require more time for me to fully recover, at which time I will resume an active schedule. I have concluded that it is simply unfair to the company to extend my absence on these grounds and the responsible course is to step aside.”

“We regret that Clarence is resigning from the company but fully understand and support his decision,” said Nortel CEO John Roth in a statement. “We wish him a speedy recovery and success in his future endeavors.”

Chandran is the second high-profile executive to leave Nortel in the past few weeks. William Conner, president of Nortel’s e-Business Solutions group, left the struggling company two weeks ago to become president and CEO of security software vendor Entrust Technologies.

Chandran was considered the successor to Roth when Roth retires in April 2002. Nortel is now actively searching for Roth’s replacement. Roth said a successor would be in place well before he retires in order to ensure a smooth transition.

“I will not be leaving until our annual meeting next year,” Roth said in a statement. “This gives us plenty of time to recruit a successor.”

In addition to being president and CEO, Roth assumed Chandran’s responsibilities overseeing day-to-day Nortel operations when Chandran went on medical leave. Roth will continue this role until his successor is in place, the company said.

Separately, Nortel is exiting the DSL business to focus on more profitable ventures, in light of the company’s sagging financial fortunes of late, according to a report from Reuters.

Citing Nortel sources and Wall Street analysts, Reuters said Nortel would exit the DSL access business it entered by acquiring Promatory Communications last year for US$778 million. Nortel was barely making a dent in the DSL market with its IMAS product line, having attained but a 6.3 percent share of the $3.2 billion market in DSL access concentrators in 2000, according to Dell’Oro Group. Nortel ranked fifth in this market behind Alcatel, Lucent, Cisco and Nokia.

In DSL CPE, Nortel’s showing was worse. The company had a 2.6 per cent share of the $1.4 billion market in 2000, ranking eighth, according to Dell’Oro.

“Nortel never made a significant penetration into the DSLAM market,” said Jeremy Duke, founder and principal analyst at Synergy Research Group in Phoenix. “This will have minimal effect on their sales, given that it is such a small portion of their overall business. And it will have nominal effect on the competitive landscape. Given that the vast majority of their DSLAM sales were targeted to smaller CLECs, which are currently going belly up or have gone belly up, this a smart move on Nortel’s part from a balance sheet perspective.”

Nortel’s DSL business accounted for $107 million in revenue for the company last year, Duke says. The total DSLAM market in 2000 was $2.8 billion, according to Synergy.

Nortel spokespeople were not immediately available to comment. The number of employees affected and the IMAS product support or migration plans could not be learned by press time.

Nortel is in the process of laying off 20,000 people by midyear due to the slowdown in capital expenditures by service providers. The company posted a loss of $385 million on revenue of $6.2 billion for the first quarter of 2001. This was down from revenue of $6.3 billion and earnings of $347 million from Q1 2000.

Would you recommend this article?

Share

Thanks for taking the time to let us know what you think of this article!
We'd love to hear your opinion about this or any other story you read in our publication.


Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

Featured Download

Featured Articles

Cybersecurity in 2024: Priorities and challenges for Canadian organizations 

By Derek Manky As predictions for 2024 point to the continued expansion...

Survey shows generative AI is a top priority for Canadian corporate leaders.

Leaders are devoting significant budget to generative AI for 2024 Canadian corporate...

Related Tech News

Tech Jobs

Our experienced team of journalists and bloggers bring you engaging in-depth interviews, videos and content targeted to IT professionals and line-of-business executives.

Tech Companies Hiring Right Now