• On MovieTome: See the villain of IRON MAN 2!
January 8, 2009 4:43 AM PST

Lenovo to cut 2,500 jobs amid restructuring

by Vivian Yeo

Chinese PC maker Lenovo confirmed Thursday that it is carrying out a restructuring, which involves the company letting go of 2,500 employees--about 11 percent of its workforce.

With the changes, the company is targeting to save $300 million annually, according to a Singapore-based company spokesperson.

Lenovo image

The announcement comes after a report surfaced earlier this week, saying that the PC maker would lay off 200 employees in its Beijing-based headquarters, including around 10 senior management staff. In response to queries from ZDNet Asia, Lenovo had dismissed the report as rumors.

At its U.S. Web site, Lenovo said the job cuts will be made globally during the first quarter of 2009. The axe will fall not only on management and executive positions, but also "in support and staff functions such as finance, human resources, and marketing."

Under the restructuring, Lenovo is consolidating its Greater China and Asia-Pacific operations--previously run as separate business units--and Russia into one. The new Asia-Pacific and Russia (APR) unit will be headed by Chen Shaopeng, who up until now was senior vice president and president for Greater China. Japan, Australia and New Zealand (ANZ) are separate from this new unit.

Among those affected by the move is David Miller, Lenovo's senior vice president and president for Asia-Pacific. The Singapore-based company spokesperson said Miller would remain with Lenovo for a "transition period" but declined to give a more specific time frame.

According to the spokesperson, cost reductions will occur in "nearly every business unit," and headquarter functions as well as duplicate functions in the new APR unit will be eliminated. "Quite a few of the Asia-Pacific functions housed in Singapore will now be housed in Beijing," she noted in a phone interview.

Lenovo's reorganization has planted three of the four BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) countries, or emerging markets, in one single region while leaving out more mature markets such as Japan and ANZ, an analyst noted in a phone interview with ZDNet Asia Thursday.

"They've got the 'RIC' countries now," said Bryan Ma, IDC's director for personal systems research in the Asia-Pacific region. "Clearly they're looking toward this region as a big growth market."

Apart from streamlining, which is "good" in the current economic environment, the changes will "hopefully help to make the company a bit faster in addressing opportunities in the market," said Ma. One of the long-time concerns about Lenovo, he explained, has been that it seems "a bit slow" to respond to some market trends, especially in the consumer space.

Whether Lenovo's actions will bear fruit, may not be known until next year as 2009 will be challenging and "economically tough for any PC vendor", Ma added.

Vivian Yeo of ZDNet Asia reported from Singapore.

Recent posts from Business Tech
Week in review: A speedier new Firefox
Hard disk or solid-state? Think again
Linux community codes around Microsoft's FAT patents
Analyst: Thin laptops have design issues
Cisco guns for Microsoft in collaboration market
Forrester: Tech recovery to start in fourth quarter
Samsung breaks Netbook mold with Nvidia chip
OLPC operating system free on a stick
Add a Comment (Log in or register) (4 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
by michaelo1966 January 8, 2009 7:11 AM PST
I'm using an IBM/Lenovo; I've always purchased Dell but was annoyed after Dell's awful support from my last computer. My verdict is that my next computer is either another Dell (I've heard they've improved lately) or maybe HP: the IBM (a Thinkpad T61) shipped as a Vista machine with incompatible video drivers. Even the updated drivers, available from Intel, won't install and the one IBM ships still crashes Vista occasionally w/ "incompatible driver" errors.
Reply to this comment
by globalist_agenda January 8, 2009 8:07 AM PST
Beware hard drives. HP Pavilion laptop drive failed after less than 1 year. Dell Inspiron laptop drive failed just after one year warranty expired. These vendors put the cheapest, least reliable drives in their computers. Backup your data daily, and budget for a new hard drive and labor to install when laptop hits one year mark.
by globalist_agenda January 8, 2009 8:08 AM PST
Lenovo laptops look like Model Ts. Worst styling I have ever seen.
Reply to this comment
by gggg sssss January 8, 2009 5:05 PM PST
I am curious - when you call lenovo for tech support - do you get someone who cant spek English in India? or someone who cant speak English in China
Reply to this comment
(4 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

Making sense of Windows 7 upgrades

faq The basics and the fine print on Microsoft's options for those eyeing the next operating system from Redmond.
• Full Windows 7 coverage

Road Trip 2009: Big Sky Country

CNET News reporter Daniel Terdiman takes his car full of gadgets to the Rockies and the Great Plains in search of tech, science, nature, and more.
• America's Fortress: Cheyenne Mountain

About Business Tech

Your destination for the latest news on enterprise-level information technology, from chip research and server design to software issues including programming, open source and patents.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Business Tech topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right