Motorola, Incorporated (MOT)
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Thomas J. Lynch, CEO/Director
1303 East Algonquin Road
Schaumburg, IL 60196
US
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Phone: (847) 576-5000
Fax: (847) 576-5372
Latest news from Portfolio
-
A New Frontier for Mobile PhonesJun 25 2008
-
Motorola TruceApr 07 2008
-
Motorola SplitsMar 26 2008
-
No Distressed Test YetMar 06 2008
-
Replacement ValueFeb 26 2008
Portfolio.com Overview
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
One day in 1930, brothers Paul and Joseph Galvin invented a playful name for the new car radio their two-year-old company had just introduced. They combined “motor” with “ola,” a suffix they associated with sound (think Victrola). By the 1940s, Galvin Manufacturing, headquartered in Chicago, was making walkie-talkies used at the battlefront; that company became Motorola in 1947. In 1969, a Motorola radio transponder relayed Neil Armstrong’s famous words as he stepped onto the surface of the moon. And in 1983, Motorola introduced the first commercial cellular phone, a plastic brick weighing 1.75 pounds.
WHAT THEY DO
Motorola is the No. 2 maker of cell phones in the world in terms of market share, falling just behind Nokia and holding a slim lead over Samsung. The company also manufactures such devices as cable modems and the set-top boxes used to decode digital-TV signals, and it provides networking services to consumers, businesses, and governments.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
A study in American entrepreneurship, Motorola, now based in Schaumburg, Illinois, was the No. 1 maker of cell phones in the technology’s early days. In 1996, Motorola’s trim StarTac debuted as the first clamshell phone and, at 3.1 ounces, it acquired high status among early adopters. Years after the StarTac’s discontinuation, devotees were still combing eBay for replacements.
But as sales of cell phones skyrocketed, competition threatened Motorola. Nokia stole Motorola’s spot at the top in 1999. In 2003, C.E.O. Christopher Galvin stepped down to make way for outsider and former Sun Microsystems C.O.O. Ed Zander, but the decline continued. The company experienced a humiliating Christmas season in 2003 when it failed to produce enough phones to meet holiday demand, and Samsung replaced Motorola as No. 2 in 2004.
A new phone introduced in the summer of 2004 brought Motorola back from third place. The company gave veteran engineer Roger Jellicoe, who had worked on the StarTac, and an all-black-wearing industrial designer named Chris Arnholt an unlimited budget to produce the thinnest phone ever. Their mission was kept top secret, lest competitors produce a rival even before the new phone was released.
Their collaboration resulted in the successful Razr V3, an ultra-thin phone with a price tag of $500—somewhat costly but not enough to dissuade gadget lovers from shelling out for it. In the second quarter of 2005, Motorola’s earnings hit $933 million, a vast improvement over the $203 million loss it recorded in the same quarter of the previous year.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
Zander didn’t know when to stop pushing the Razr. He offered the phone at enormous discounts as a way for Motorola to sell its way back to No. 1, but as the Razr became ubiquitous—offered almost free with some service plans—customers upgraded to flashier phones by Samsung and Nokia, and Motorola follow-ups such as the Krzr have struggled to sell, perhaps because of their similarities to the Razr.
Early 2007 wasn’t kind to Zander. Motorola’s stock had plunged in late 2006, and Zander announced plans to cut 3,500 jobs. Then came the news that billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who owned 1.4 percent of the company, wanted to increase his stake to 6 percent and join the board. The final blow: Ron Garriques, head of Motorola’s mobile-phone division, left for Dell in February.
WHAT'S NEXT
Vowing to earn Wall Street’s respect, Zander launched a new plan in Europe, where director of marketing Simon Thompson is on a mission to nurture an emotional attachment in customers who see Motorola’s products as just "cheap, pretty phones." Thompson wants to cultivate "brand love," not more Razr attempts. The focus will now be on more nuts-and-bolts aspects of cell phones, such as functionality and customer experience—not just more “cool” design.
One day in 1930, brothers Paul and Joseph Galvin invented a playful name for the new car radio their two-year-old company had just introduced. They combined “motor” with “ola,” a suffix they associated with sound (think Victrola). By the 1940s, Galvin Manufacturing, headquartered in Chicago, was making walkie-talkies used at the battlefront; that company became Motorola in 1947. In 1969, a Motorola radio transponder relayed Neil Armstrong’s famous words as he stepped onto the surface of the moon. And in 1983, Motorola introduced the first commercial cellular phone, a plastic brick weighing 1.75 pounds.
WHAT THEY DO
Motorola is the No. 2 maker of cell phones in the world in terms of market share, falling just behind Nokia and holding a slim lead over Samsung. The company also manufactures such devices as cable modems and the set-top boxes used to decode digital-TV signals, and it provides networking services to consumers, businesses, and governments.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
A study in American entrepreneurship, Motorola, now based in Schaumburg, Illinois, was the No. 1 maker of cell phones in the technology’s early days. In 1996, Motorola’s trim StarTac debuted as the first clamshell phone and, at 3.1 ounces, it acquired high status among early adopters. Years after the StarTac’s discontinuation, devotees were still combing eBay for replacements.
But as sales of cell phones skyrocketed, competition threatened Motorola. Nokia stole Motorola’s spot at the top in 1999. In 2003, C.E.O. Christopher Galvin stepped down to make way for outsider and former Sun Microsystems C.O.O. Ed Zander, but the decline continued. The company experienced a humiliating Christmas season in 2003 when it failed to produce enough phones to meet holiday demand, and Samsung replaced Motorola as No. 2 in 2004.
A new phone introduced in the summer of 2004 brought Motorola back from third place. The company gave veteran engineer Roger Jellicoe, who had worked on the StarTac, and an all-black-wearing industrial designer named Chris Arnholt an unlimited budget to produce the thinnest phone ever. Their mission was kept top secret, lest competitors produce a rival even before the new phone was released.
Their collaboration resulted in the successful Razr V3, an ultra-thin phone with a price tag of $500—somewhat costly but not enough to dissuade gadget lovers from shelling out for it. In the second quarter of 2005, Motorola’s earnings hit $933 million, a vast improvement over the $203 million loss it recorded in the same quarter of the previous year.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
Zander didn’t know when to stop pushing the Razr. He offered the phone at enormous discounts as a way for Motorola to sell its way back to No. 1, but as the Razr became ubiquitous—offered almost free with some service plans—customers upgraded to flashier phones by Samsung and Nokia, and Motorola follow-ups such as the Krzr have struggled to sell, perhaps because of their similarities to the Razr.
Early 2007 wasn’t kind to Zander. Motorola’s stock had plunged in late 2006, and Zander announced plans to cut 3,500 jobs. Then came the news that billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who owned 1.4 percent of the company, wanted to increase his stake to 6 percent and join the board. The final blow: Ron Garriques, head of Motorola’s mobile-phone division, left for Dell in February.
WHAT'S NEXT
Vowing to earn Wall Street’s respect, Zander launched a new plan in Europe, where director of marketing Simon Thompson is on a mission to nurture an emotional attachment in customers who see Motorola’s products as just "cheap, pretty phones." Thompson wants to cultivate "brand love," not more Razr attempts. The focus will now be on more nuts-and-bolts aspects of cell phones, such as functionality and customer experience—not just more “cool” design.
Portfolio Articles
-
A New Frontier for Mobile Phones
The mobile software age has arrived with Nokia's decision to release Symbian under an open source license.Jun 25 2008 -
Motorola Truce
Icahn and company agree on board nominees.Apr 07 2008 -
Motorola Splits
Company to spin off flagging cell-phone business.Mar 26 2008 -
No Distressed Test Yet
Investor and budding blogger Carl Icahn on the distressed markets.Mar 06 2008 -
Replacement Value
Tech strategist Arnie Berman tells Duff McDonald how corner-office carnage can lead to big tech stock gains.Feb 26 2008
News Feeds
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Sector Snap: Cell phones down on Nokia warning
AP
Sep 05 2008
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Motorola settles patent suit with General Patent
AP
Aug 26 2008
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Motorola unveils low-end phones for music and Web
Reuters
Aug 20 2008
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Motorola shares slip in light trading
AP
Aug 18 2008
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Motorola up as analyst calls 2Q turning point
AP
Aug 15 2008
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RIM hits 10 percent U.S. market share record
Reuters
Aug 11 2008
Portfolio Blogs
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Why New Cell Market Share Numbers Spell Bad News for Moto
Aug 27 2008
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Moto: Good News/Bad News
Aug 11 2008
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Which CEOs Have the Highest and Worst Approval Ratings?
Aug 06 2008
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Moto's Challenge for its New Co-CEO
Aug 05 2008
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Last Bytes: Facebook, Lenovo, Cablevision, Motorola
Aug 04 2008
Press Releases
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Seven Summits Research Releases Comments on RIMM, AIG, HOG, MOT, and GTI Sep-05-2008, 10:26AM EDT
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Keynote Presentation by Motorola Co-CEO Greg Brown at the Deutsche Bank Technology Conference Sep-04-2008, 09:00AM EDT
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Online Systems Engineering Master's Program Attracts Engineers from Fortune 500 Firms Sep-03-2008, 11:22AM EDT
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Fuel Cell Forum in Germany Invites VIASPACE CEO to Speak on Fuel Cartridge Infrastructure Sep-03-2008, 08:30AM EDT
News From Around the Web
News
-
Sep 07 2008
-
Back-to-school electronics astounding
(Edmonton Journal)Sep 07 2008 -
Jury Still Out On 'White Spaces' Devices, FCC Continues Tests
(Information Week)Sep 07 2008 -
Scottsdale officials keep eye on fissure
(East Valley Tribune)Sep 06 2008 -
Sep 06 2008
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Guess Which Phone Was The Best Selling Phone In July...
(Information Week)Sep 05 2008 -
Sep 05 2008
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Motorola Deploys Campus-Wide Wireless LAN for Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications
(TMCnet.com)Sep 05 2008 -
Deutsche Telekom and Motorola Collaborate on IPTV
(TMCnet.com)Sep 05 2008 -
Motorola may connect Sierra Leone's government offices
(NetworkWorld)Sep 04 2008
Blogs
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Motorola U9 reviewed
(Crave: The gadget blog)Sep 05 2008 -
Sep 03 2008
-
Sep 02 2008
-
Sprint unleashes Motorola Renegade V950, Motorola i365
(Crave: The gadget blog)Sep 02 2008 -
Sprint Announces Motorola i365 and V950
(Phone Scoop)Sep 02 2008
Employees
Number of Employees: 66,000
Revenue per Employee: $554,879
Top Executives
Daniel M. Moloney, Divisional President/Executive VP
Eugene A. Delaney, Senior VP, Divisional
Ray Roman, Senior VP, Divisional
Gregory Q. Brown, President/Director/Co-CEO/CEO, Divisional
Kenneth C. Keller, Jr., Executive VP/Other Executive Officer
A. Peter Lawson, Executive VP/Secretary/General Counsel
Terry Vega, Senior VP, Divisional
Steven J. Strobel, Treasurer/Senior VP, Divisional
Laurel G. Meissner, Chief Accounting Officer/Vice President, Divisional
Dr. Sanjay K. Jha, Co-CEO/Director/CEO, Divisional
Richard N. Nottenburg, Executive VP/Other Executive Officer
Patricia B. Morrison, Chief Information Officer/Executive VP
Gregory A. Lee, Senior VP, Divisional
Ruth A. Fattori, Divisional Executive VP
Adrian Nemcek, Divisional President/Executive VP
Marc E. Rothman, Senior VP, Divisional/CFO, Divisioinal
Paul J. Liska, CFO/Executive VP
Padmasree Warrior, Executive VP/Chief Technology Officer
Rita S. Lane, Senior VP, Divisional
Board of Directors
Judy C. Lewent, Director
Gregory Q. Brown, President/Director/Co-CEO/CEO, Divisional
Samuel C. Scott, III, Director
William R. Hambrecht, Director Nominee
A. Peter Lawson, Executive VP/Secretary/General Counsel
Miles D. White, Director
Steven J. Strobel, Treasurer/Senior VP, Divisional
Dr. Sanjay K. Jha, Co-CEO/Director/CEO, Divisional
Anthony J. Vinciquerra, Director
Financials
Quarterly
Annual
| Income Statement | 08/2008 | 04/2008 | 01/2008 | 10/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 5.63 Bil. | 5.1 Bil. | 6.97 Bil. | 6.16 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 2.46 Bil. | 2.35 Bil. | 2.67 Bil. | 2.65 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 293 Mil. | 112 Mil. | 303 Mil. | 340 Mil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 23 Mil. | -165 Mil. | 33 Mil. | 99 Mil. |
| Total Net Income | 4 Mil. | -194 Mil. | 100 Mil. | 60 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 0 | -0.09 | 0.04 | 0.03 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 0 | -0.09 | 0.04 | 0.03 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 08/2008 | 04/2008 | 01/2008 | 10/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 2.76 Bil. | 2.69 Bil. | 2.75 Bil. | 2.32 Bil. |
| Total Assets | 20.22 Bil. | 20.48 Bil. | 22.22 Bil. | 21.66 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 11.57 Bil. | 11.78 Bil. | 12.5 Bil. | 12.9 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 19.18 Bil. | 19.25 Bil. | 19.44 Bil. | 17.67 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 08/2008 | 04/2008 | 01/2008 | 10/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | -139 Mil. | -343 Mil. | 729 Mil. | 382 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | 557 Mil. | 553 Mil. | 2.38 Bil. | 2.03 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | -485 Mil. | -415 Mil. | -3.3 Bil. | -2.85 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | 5 Mil. | -59 Mil. | -64 Mil. | -501 Mil. |
| Income Statement | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 26.23 Bil. | 29.59 Bil. | 24.45 Bil. | 20.17 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 10.39 Bil. | 13.28 Bil. | 12.39 Bil. | 11.16 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 869 Mil. | 4.68 Bil. | 4.85 Bil. | 3.89 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | -390 Mil. | 4.94 Bil. | 6.84 Bil. | 3.45 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | -49 Mil. | 3.66 Bil. | 4.58 Bil. | 1.53 Bil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | -0.02 | 1.5 | 1.85 | 0.65 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | -0.02 | 1.46 | 1.81 | 0.64 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 2.75 Bil. | 3.21 Bil. | 3.77 Bil. | 10.56 Bil. |
| Total Assets | 22.22 Bil. | 30.98 Bil. | 27.87 Bil. | 21.08 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 12.5 Bil. | 15.42 Bil. | 12.49 Bil. | 10.57 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 19.44 Bil. | 19.85 Bil. | 20.48 Bil. | 17.91 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 729 Mil. | 3.9 Bil. | 4.6 Bil. | 3.15 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | 2.38 Bil. | -1.05 Bil. | -2.38 Bil. | -163 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | -3.3 Bil. | -3.16 Bil. | -1.19 Bil. | -237 Mil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | -64 Mil. | -562 Mil. | 928 Mil. | 2.77 Bil. |
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