Telephony University

Telephony University

Join us for an in-depth day on Deep Packet Inspection. Telephony University presents three Webcasts and an interactive panel of experts to explore all things DPI. You’ll hear from the industry professionals leading the way and participate in Q+A with our experts.

Learn more
         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines     

Extreme’s new CEO describes turnaround plans

more on the topic

More Related Articles

Mark Canepa, who was named the new chief executive officer of Extreme Networks in August, highlighted his goals for reviving the Ethernet equipment vendor during its quarterly earnings call late Friday.

Calling Extreme’s problems a matter of execution rather than positioning, Canepa described four pillars of his turnaround strategy: clearly identifying market segments in which Extreme has a “strong, sustainable” competitive advantage, driving down costs and increasing efficiencies in market segments whose customer requirements change at the slowest pace, exploring new, emerging market segments and taking a more “solutions-oriented” approach to selling.

“It is no longer adequate to simply sell speeds and feeds,” Canepa said. “We have to move beyond moving packets and begin to offer better ways to address the challenges of convergence and security. We’re training our sales force to increasingly have those kinds of conversations with customers rather than just what’s the price of a gigabit port.”

Bulking up Extreme’s sales force has been a particular problem for the company. In the most recent quarter, Extreme boosted its total headcount by nine to 856. During Friday’s call, however, the company admitted that recent additions to the U.S. sales force had not yet risen to “full productivity.”

For the quarter that ended Oct. 1, 2006, Extreme reported a 14% year-over-year decline in net revenue. U.S. revenue in particular was down 24% from a year earlier to $34.2 million, while overseas revenue was down only 6% to $49.6 million.

A 10-year veteran of Sun Microsystems, Canepa also vowed to overhaul the company’s supply chain structure. In the most recent quarter, Avaya, as a reseller, contributed more than 10% of Extreme’s revenue.

“Today Extreme is organized functionally with a single product development and supply chain methodology geared towards internal [research and development] and a customized supply chain to produce products,” Canepa said. “It is also focused primarily on product development, with a significantly lesser focus on the development of the services required to express more of the value proposition to the customer.”

Canepa vowed to make a series of structural changes to the company throughout this quarter and beyond. Some changes have already been underway, he said, including efforts to bulk up the U.S. sales force in particular since July, when the company’s U.S. division was placed under the authority of Eileen Booker, a two-year veteran of Extreme.

“Portions of [Extreme’s] markets have matured during the past few years,” Canepa said. “The level of differentiation required and the price companies are willing to pay for this differentiation has changed. The market requires a blend of highly differentiated products as well as a set of more cost-effective products. The company has to continue to deliver differentiation but also has to deliver products to a more mature and therefore more cost-sensitive customer set.”

Canepa has no plans to pull the company out of tough geographic markets, and he said he will let the company’s success determine what portion of its customer base will be enterprises as opposed to service providers. (In the most recent quarter, which was typical, 78% of Extreme’s revenue came from enterprise customers, while 22% came from service providers.)

“I’m not going to make a guess as to any of that,” Canepa said. “We’re going to let [the sales people] run and see what happens.”

Related Articles

Extreme names new CEO

Extreme sales force under pressure

Extreme still struggling with sales


Commenting terms of use blog comments powered by Disqus
Get Updates Via Email

related resources

popular articles

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008 Penton Media Inc.

White Papers

WHITE PAPER

Are You Letting Hot Prospects Go to the Competition?

You spend millions of dollars on marketing campaigns to trigger consumer interest in your services. Find out how some communications carriers are increasing conversion rates. DOWNLOAD NOW

Podcasts

PODCAST

A Telephony Podcast: Qwest Communications launched its qHome Portal

Qwest Communications launched its qHome Portal this week, uniting its Qwest Choice Home voice service and its DSL-based high-speed Internet service through Microsoft’s Windows Live LISTEN

Blogs

BLOG

Infinera: What spending slowdown?

Optical equipment vendor Infinera is apparently not seeing the same broad carrier spending slowdown related to economic uncertainty that other vendors are reporting.READ

E-Books

E-BOOK

Broadband for the Masses from Motorola

This e-book provides insights on how fixed broadband wireless services can provide affordable solutions in an unlicensed spectrum. READ NOW!

TV

TV

Interview with Jim Hansen of Embarq at NXTcomm08

Tune in to Telephony TV to watch an interview with Embarq's Jim Hansen at NXTcomm08. WATCH IT NOW.

  • Telephony Content
  • Telephony Content

current issue

Current Issue

December 1, 2008

The next network frontier offers new opportunities for service providers. Read Now

more news

Global >>

MORE

Ethernet >>

MORE

Independent >>

MORE

IPTV >>

MORE

IMS >>

MORE

WiMax >>

MORE

VOIP >>

MORE

FTTX >>

MORE

Access >>

MORE

Broadband >>

MORE

Wireless >>

MORE

Software >>

MORE

Podcasts >>

MORE

Get Updates Via Email

Browse Issues

  • December 1, 2008
  • November 1, 2008
  • October 1, 2008
  • September 1, 2008
  • July 14, 2008
  • June 30, 2008
  • Jun 16, 2008