Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses News

Symantec To Separate Into Two Companies 86

wiredmikey writes Symantec announced plans on Thursday to split into two separate, publicly traded companies – one focused on security, the other focused on information management. The company's security business generated $4.2 billion in revenue in fiscal year 2014 while its information management business meanwhile hit revenues of $2.5 billion. "As the security and storage industries continue to change at an accelerating pace, Symantec's security and IM businesses each face unique market opportunities and challenges," Symantec CEO Michael A. Brown, who officially took over as CEO last month, said in a statement. Garrett Bekker, senior analyst with 451 Research, called the decision "long overdue." "The company had become too big to manage, and they were having trouble keeping up with the pace of innovation in many areas of security," he told SecurityWeek. "The synergies between storage and security never really emerged, in part because in many firms, particularly large enterprises, they are managed by different internal teams."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Symantec To Separate Into Two Companies

Comments Filter:
  • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @08:12AM (#48110133)
    I'm still waiting for one company to split into Micro and Soft.
  • by Dynamoo ( 527749 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @08:16AM (#48110151) Homepage
    ..Peter Norton Computing?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 10, 2014 @09:33AM (#48110601)

      Because software like Norton Antivirus have sullied it, Peter Norton has changed his name to something less offensive. He's now known as Peter Hitler.

    • Veritas?
  • I was expecting them to split into 2 mutually beneficial companies: one that produces virii, one that "protects" from them.
    • one that produces virii, one that "protects" from them.

      I thought that they worked hard to create a virus that slipped through their $competitors, but would get caught by $their_own. Isn't that why things work the way they do in the antivirus field? Why else would one antivirus package already detect a virus that all the others don't yet?

  • HP is a great example... one division responsible for a tool such as Fortify wants full price (or more) for another's use of the tool, though they'd both benefit. Every company I've worked for typically has one group trying to overcharge another, or even outright backstabbing, which is a real shame, because it only hurts the overall company's bottom line.

    That's what you get when you put greedy MBAs in charge, worse when they don't reign in the behavior of their underlings, who are simply emulating their bos

    • by Rich0 ( 548339 )

      When the money transfers cause people to avoid utilization or purchase another product, it can be a real harm to the company (unless it is more than offset by some benefit from using the competing product - though that should REALLY motivate you to fix something).

      On the other hand, as long as it doesn't affect decision-making these sorts of things can have legitimate accounting purposes. At my workplace we realized it would be a lot simpler from an accounting/legal standpoint if we just charged our supplie

    • Never is an awfully strong word. Just off the top of my head, Apple/Siri, Micron/Elpida, and Lenovo/IBM Thinkpad have all been extremely successful mergers with obvious synergies. But most successful mergers are boring and don't make the news much, whereas we've been hearing about HP's ongoing woes for at least three solid years.

  • by gelfling ( 6534 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @09:01AM (#48110371) Homepage Journal

    Two smaller companies don't have to grow revenues as much to meet the EPS thresholds that institutional investors demand. They ONLY other option was to become IBM and that's to simply run around BUYING other companies.

    • "They ONLY other option was to become IBM and that's to simply run around BUYING other companies."

      That was Symantec for most of the last ten years.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's just a matter of semantics

  • Excuse me... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Torp ( 199297 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @09:34AM (#48110611)

    Is Symantec doing anything useful?
    I think the last useful version of Norton Utilities was 6.0, which was before the Symantec buyout?
    Now they're just marketing fear...

    • They're a great selling point for me. A former boss of mine always said "We don't say anything negative about our competitors. We say 'Symantec software comes in really great looking boxes'".

      We need Symantec in the biz. It's usually easy to sell when you compare your product with something from "industry standard Symantec" and you can easily show how you surpass them.

    • Well, they bought Verisign so if you used their SSL services you were switched to Symantec. And it appears that they still have a lot of market share in that area even though I'm sure a lot of existing Verisign customers screamed Nooooooo!! at the top of their lungs when they heard about the buyout and switched to something else as soon as possible*.

      *He says from experience!

    • Is Symantec doing anything useful? I think the last useful version of Norton Utilities was 6.0, which was before the Symantec buyout? Now they're just marketing fear...

      Referencing Norton Utilities is like referencing buggy whips. It was a brilliant product in the DOS era, when it was necessary. It was less and less useful as Windows emerged and obsoleted most of its features. Once the OS contained a defrag utility, NU had less purpose to exist, for example. This is why PC Tools is also not around in anything like its original form.

      On the other hand, yes, Symantec does plenty of useful things. For instance, their e-mail content control software and hardware, based o

      • by Torp ( 199297 )

        Norton Utilities 6.0 *was* DOS :)
        You're saying their "enterprise products" aren't bloated, useless, fearmongering piles of crap?
        Maybe that's why they're splitting, no one who has experienced the consumer products will believe that.

        • Norton Utilities 6.0 *was* DOS :)

          Do you remember by any chance one of the utilities called NDOS? It was a command.com shell replacement that was massively more powerful. Things like tab filename completion, arrow up/down command history, and a tonne of variables. Technically NDOS was a licensed version of a JPSoft product called 4DOS. Well, 4DOS ended up having an OS/2 version, 4OS2. Then they compiled a native WinNT version, 4NT. That has eventually changed product names to TCC. Which I still use on all the machines I have responsi

  • Veritas rewind (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Call the information management side "Veritas" and apologize to the long time NetBackup customers for the Symantec years. They are lucky that some of us didn't jump ship after NBU was absorbed. Support, community and quality all took a hit.

  • John Gannon is supposed to be the new "general manager" of the Info Mgmt business - if he's not the CEO and Brown is still going to be in charge, what's the fucking point?

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday October 10, 2014 @09:51AM (#48110757)

    One that doesn't know how to make antivirus and one that doesn't have a clue about firewalls?

    • One that's really profitable and one that's not.
      • I thought that's what HP did, with one company doing the printers and the other one doing the ink?

        • The storage business was too myopic to capitalize on cloud storage/'box' stuff and just plods along making profit margins that would be OK for a grocery chain but that are soso at best for the tech industry. Buying into that biz was a stupid idea, finally it's being undone.
  • ``The synergies between storage and security never really emerged, in part because in many firms, particularly large enterprises, they are managed by different internal teams.''

    How could this have possibly been a surprise to the people responsible for pulling off the merger? How large and thick the blinders must have been for this to not be recognized until after all the money had been spent during the acquisition and the obligatory layoffs of the redundant took place?

  • I'd forgotten they still exist.
  • What, they're spinning off their malware component from their malware-detector? That could actually result in one usable product...
  • into one division that writes the viruses and another that writes the antivirus.

Software production is assumed to be a line function, but it is run like a staff function. -- Paul Licker

Working...