Nokia to cut 10,000 jobs, divest assets

Nokia to cut 10,000 jobs, divest assets

Nokia Corp. has replaced three senior executives, including the head of its mobile phone division. And it plans to reduce payroll by up to 10,000 as it struggles to restore profitability and improve its competitive position against companies like Apple Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. (Korea: SEC).

In a press release Thursday (June 14), Nokia announced the appointment of Juha Putkiranta as head of operations, Chris Weber as vice president of sales and marketing, and Timo Toikkanen as head of the mobile phone division, replacing Mary McDowell. The company also announced the departure of Jerri DeVard, its head of marketing, and Niklas Savander, its executive vice president of markets.


Nokia has been restructuring operations for more than a year as it has lost wireless handset marketshare. The losses deepened as consumers flocked to smartphones, abandoning the plain feature phones that helped to make Nokia the market leader. It has since lost that position to Samsung, and it posted four consecutive quarters of net losses starting in the first quarter of 2011. The losses have been compounded by one-time charges associated with the restructuring.


"We intend to pursue an even more focused effort on Lumia, continued innovation around our feature phones, while placing increased emphasis on our location-based services," Stephen Elop, president and CEO of Nokia, said in the release. "However, we must reshape our operating model and ensure that we create a structure that can support our competitive ambitions."


The latest reorganization will result in the closing of facilities in Canada and Germany, along with other steps to reduce its factory footprint. "These planned reductions are a difficult consequence of the intended actions we believe we must take to ensure Nokia's long-term competitive strength," Elop said.


The company also announced the sale of its luxury phone business today to the European private equity firm EQT VI, and it said it "will closely assess the future of certain non-core assets." Nokia expects to cut operating expenses in the devices and services business to €3 billion (approximately $3.8 billion) by 2013 from €5.35 billion ($6.7 billion) in 2010. The company said it has recorded savings of €700 million as of the end of the first quarter and is seeking about €1.6 billion of additional cost cuts by the end of next year.


Here are further changes planned by Nokia:

  • Reductions within certain research and development projects, resulting in the planned closure of its facilities in Ulm, Germany and Burnaby, Canada;
  • Consolidation of certain manufacturing operations, resulting in the planned closure of its manufacturing facility in Salo, Finland. Research and Development efforts in Salo to continue;
  • Focusing of marketing and sales activities, including prioritizing key markets;
  • Streamlining of IT, corporate and support functions; and
  • Reductions related to non-core assets, including possible divestments.

    This article was originally posted to EDN, an EE Times sister site.

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