You are here: silicon.com > Management > Law & Policy

Law & Policy

Bungling Bull loses offspring's respect

Bull's services division Integris is distancing itself from its French parent company Bull after a history of poor results and an ever-changing business model.

By Suzanna Kerridge

Published: 16 March 2001 18:00 GMT

In an attempt to throw off the financial troubles of the past few months, the company will be legally, not merely cosmetically, separated, according to John Gibson, CEO at Integris.

Bull announced a reorganisation of its business in January in a bid to bring the company back to profitability. The firm posted a turnover of only E3.24bn (£2bn) in 2000 - a fall of 2.3 per cent. It is also plagued with rumours that it will sell off its struggling server division.

Guy de Panafieu, CEO of Groupe Bull, said the company was looking for a partner to take a majority stake in Integris. However, the firm's insistence of maintaining control of the joint operation was deterring would-be partners.

Speaking to silicon.com, Gibson said: "This is a real split that allows Integris to have a real chance to align ourselves better with the customer. The price and service we offer is not done to cover our backs or to prop up the smartcard business or Bull's hardware division."

The company will go to market in only limited areas - the public sector including central and regional government, finance and banking sector and the police and civil justice.
Gibson said Integris wanted to avoid being the Marks & Spencer's of the services industry.

He added: "We won't do in the UK things we don't understand. We don't profess to do everything but those things we do can drive up a company's volumes of sales or reduce costs. What should worry the market is if we purported to invest six to eight sectors - especially with the problems we've had. We can't sustain that."

However, the company has decided to take on the telco market and will use the profits from the finance sector business to support it.

Despite the recent bad performance of telcos in the markets and the overall slowdown of spending from the telecom industry, Gibson believes there is still value in managed services for telcos.

"We might not be the biggest services company in the UK but we can find medium size organizations that need our help and we have a strong European footprint."

He added: "We've been a bit beleaguered but we will do well coming out of 2000. When we start to see the gross margin creeping up the market can take it as a good sign that we have confidence in what the company is doing."

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

Peter Cochrane Peter Cochrane's Blog: Quality by design Why do picky people settle for poor design at work?

Naked CIO The Naked CIO: Service level disagreements SLAs - not worth the paper they're written on?


  • Jobs
Senior Sales Executive/Account Director

What you can expect from Bull: - A genuine and thoughtful welcome - Unprecedented commitment to training and development - Coaching and mentoring ...

Development Team Leader C# / ASP.NET / SharePoint Oxfordshire

This rapidly developing division offers a rare chance for the development team leader to shape the future direction and architecture of an enterprise ...

Operations Manager (Technical pre-sales team)/ IT Manager- Abingdon, Oxfordshire

Develop tools and processes to ensure right first time implementations BSF Bid support: Provide resource and tools to support the BSF Solution ...

CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: