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Intel CEO shakes up units; new group set up

San Francisco, May 22, 2013

 

Intel Corp's new chief executive, Brian Krzanich, has launched a sweeping company reorganization and created a unit aimed at growing its market share in mobile technology.
 
The shakeup, announced internally just days after the 30-year veteran took the helm, places most of the main product groups of the world's top chipmaker directly under the CEO's supervision and hands its sprawling global manufacturing operation to new president Renee James, said a source close to the company, who declined to be identified.
 
Details of the reorganization were outlined in an internal memo sent to employees on Monday. It was described to Reuters by a company source and details of the reorganization, which is effective immediately, were confirmed by spokesman Chuck Mulloy on Tuesday.
 
"As your CEO I am committed to making quick, informed decisions. I am committed to being bolder, moving faster, and accepting that this means changes will be made knowing that we will listen, learn and then make adjustments in order to keep pace with a rapidly changing industry," Krzanich said in the email, according to the source.
 
"Our business faces significant challenges, and we simply must continue to execute while finalising our future strategy," he reportedly wrote.
 
Krzanich officially took over as CEO last week and said that under his leadership, the top chipmaker will be more responsive to customers in an intensified focus on the fast-growing smartphone and tablet market where it lags rivals.
 
The chipmaker's main product groups - including the PC client group, mobile communications and data center unit that previously reported to Intel Architecture group chief Dadi Perlmutter - now report directly to Krzanich.
 
After Perlmutter transfers his business groups, he and Krzanich will "define his next significant contribution at Intel," according to the email described by the source.
 
Intel has called the shots in the personal computer industry for decades, but it was slow to react to the explosion of smartphones and tablets. The latter two markets are now dominated by competitors like Qualcomm and Samsung Electronics, which design their chips using architecture licensed from ARM Holdings.
 
In his three-decade career at Intel, Krzanich has become known for making fast decisions after consulting with trusted lieutenants. This week's reorganization is Krzanich's first step in a process aimed at making Intel more focused and more agile, Mulloy said.
 
Mike Bell will head up Intel's newly formed "new devices" group," which Mulloy said will focus on emerging product trends. "The new devices organization is responsible for rapidly turning brilliant technical and business model innovations into products that shape and lead markets," Krzanich said in the email, according to the source.
 
James, formerly head of the software arm, will now also oversee the company's sprawling global manufacturing operations and all aspects of security technology.
 
Mulloy said Intel presidents have traditionally been responsible for managing the manufacturing operations.
 
James will also lead corporate strategy and planning. Her previous job as Intel's software chief has been taken over by Doug Fisher, a senior executive from that group.
 
Krzanich's creation of the "new devices" group signals he is also looking beyond today's gadgets. "It's a matter of what they do with the new division, what can they identify and then deliver that maybe would not have otherwise been something we'd see Intel inside of. It could be very meaningful if they can execute," said Williams Financial analyst Cody Acree. - Reuters



Tags: Intel | Mobile | Devices |

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