lunes, 12 de mayo de 2014

Lenovo, the Treasure Hunter of Tech (BusinessWeek)


Earlier this year, Lenovo went shopping. The Chinese maker of computers and smartphones said in late January that it was buying Motorola, the iconic mobile phone brand, from Google (GOOG) for $2.9 billion, less than a week after announcing the $2.3 billion purchase of IBM’s (IBM) low-end server business. If the two deals receive U.S. government approval, Lenovo will have more than tripled in revenue, going to almost $50 billion from $15 billion five years ago.
Even before those acquisitions, the company’s expansion has been striking. Last year it became the top-selling personal-computer maker in the world. Four years after introducing its first smartphone, the LePhone, it’s fourth in that business globally—and with Motorola it will become third, behind Samsung Electronics and Apple (AAPL). Ten years ago, Lenovo sold only one product, PCs, in one country, China. Now it sells PCs, phones, tablets, and servers in more than 160 countries. It has 46,000 employees. And yet, in the U.S. and Europe—where many of its users are managers and salespeople with corporate-issue Lenovo ThinkPads—the name barely registers.
Partly this is because Lenovo, for much of its history, has focused its efforts on China, but it’s also because under its chief executive officer, Yang Yuanqing, Lenovo has taken an unglamorous approach to empire building. Unlike Apple, Samsung,Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), and most other major manufacturers, Lenovo builds much of its own equipment in its own low-cost factories. And over the past decade the company has grown into a global giant by being a kind of computer industry rollup, cannily scavenging other companies’ castoffs. “Not only can we keep the manufacturing profit, but also we can be more innovative than the other PC companies,” Yang says. “That’s why over the past five years we beat every PC company in the world.”
The fact remains, though, that the PC market is shrinking, and economic growth in China, still Lenovo’s biggest market, is slowing. Its latest shopping spree is in part an acknowledgment of those forces. The company is looking to become a force in the still-growing business of mobile: a maker and marketer of smartphones, tablets, and whatever as-yet-undetermined device consumers of the near future come to believe they need on their person at all times. Motorola gives Lenovo an infusion of talent, access to a bundle of intellectual property—Google is keeping the patents but will license them to Lenovo royalty-free—and a brand that, despite losing more than $1 billion last year, remains one of the best-known in phones.
Jumping into mobile also puts Lenovo in unfamiliar territory: a dynamic market that’s contested by the biggest powers in tech. “For Lenovo, the competition has shifted from HP and Acer and Dell to Samsung and Apple,” says William Grabe, a member of the company’s board and a former IBM executive. “Lenovo wants to be a hundred-billion-dollar company, and you’re not going to get there just by improving PCs or even servers.”
 
 
Yang, 49, is among China’s biggest business celebrities, and biographies such as the 2007 Lenovo’s Young Marshal describe his modest upbringing, his wealth, his strategic boldness, and his personal humility. It’s widely known in China, for example, that for the past two years he has donated his annual bonus to thousands of lower-level company employees.

With Andrew Mayeda, Bruce Einhorn, Christina Larson, and Dexter Roberts

Bennett is a staff writer for Bloomberg Businessweek in New York.

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario