The Info Tech 100

Constant reinvention of who you are, what you produce, and how you sell it is critical for any tech player


Not too long ago, it looked as if Finnish handset maker Nokia Corp. (NOK ) had hit a wall with the saturation of its core European market. What pessimists did not notice, though, was how the Finns were laying tracks to the fastest-growing part of the global economy: emerging markets. Today, Nokia is proving that even people with low incomes can be profitable customers. By creating innovative products such as phone books that use symbols rather than letters for illiterate users, Nokia has become the leading handset maker in India and China and is seeing strong growth in Africa and Latin America. China, in fact, has become Nokia's biggest market, with $6.6 billion in sales last year, or 8% of its total.

Nokia's goal is to boost the total number of mobile-phone users worldwide to 5 billion by 2015, up from an estimated 3 billion by the end of 2007, largely on the back of developing markets. "People always have a fundamental need to communicate," says Rauno Granath, head of new growth markets for Nokia Siemens Networks, a joint venture with Germany's Siemens (SI ).

If there's one theme that unites the companies on the 2007 Information Technology 100, BusinessWeek's ranking of the top tech performers, it's reinvention. The foray into emerging markets by Nokia, which ranked 17th, is just one example. An ability to rapidly diversify into new businesses or turn existing markets upside down pops up again and again in our lineup. And it is an eclectic group, ranging from the top Web retailer, No. 1 Amazon.com (AMZN ), to a Latin American wireless provider, No. 2 América Móvil, (AMX ) and perhaps the hottest tech outfit around, No. 6 Apple (AAPL ).

If you're network-equipment king Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO ), No. 20, new growth is being found in part through efforts to become a more consumer-focused company. Wall Street responded to Cisco's strategy of selling wireless routers and set-top boxes by lifting the company's stock about 37% in the 12 months through May 31. For longtime also-ran Nintendo Co., (NTDOY ) the key is expanding video games beyond hard-core young male gamers. Reaching out to women and older adults, Nintendo ignited 90% year-over-year revenue growth and climbed to No. 8 on our list. In homes that have one of Nintendo's much sought-after Wii game systems, 10% of the women over 50 are playing regularly. "There is no question that people are picking up a controller who haven't ever picked up one before," says Nintendo of America President Reginale Fils-Aime.

Of course, high-tech markets have long demanded more frequent and rapid change. One thing different now is that the rise of high-speed Internet access and mobile computing are creating new opportunities for transformation. América Móvil, the predominant wireless operator in Latin America, had another banner year in 2006 by adding 31 million data-hungry wireless customers in 15 countries throughout the Americas, including the U.S.

THE NET AS A CATAPULT
The Net is also shattering boundaries between formerly siloed industries like cable and telecom. While communications giants such as Verizon Communications (VZ ) (No. 25) and AT&T (T ) (No. 7) are attacking the pay-TV business, so far cable operators are having more success in poaching customers from the phone industry. A few years ago, Comcast Corp. (CMCSA ) made zip from selling phone service. In the quarter ended Mar. 31, the cable provider signed up 571,000 phone customers, generating $353 million in voice revenues, nearly double the previous year. Voice sales accounted for 5% of Comcast's total sales in the quarter and are on track to reach 10% of sales by the end of the year. That explains why a cable company is No. 62 on the list this year.

Our top-ranked company, Amazon.com Inc., demonstrates another power of Internet technology: It's a super-efficient lever that can catapult a company into new markets. In its most recent quarter, Amazon's profits surged 115% on a 39% jump in sales. One reason is a sizable, growing business in helping other retailers sell their wares on Amazon, for which it charges high-margin fees.

In some ways, Amazon is the ultimate example of transformation. Despite constant criticism, Amazon CEO Jeffrey P. Bezos quickly moved the company beyond selling books to other media, then to electronics, and just about everything else. Now Bezos is working on his next diversification play: offering other businesses spare computing and storage capacity, as well as leftover space in Amazon's huge distribution centers. The strategy has yet to deliver meaningful revenues, or any profits. But as Bezos will tell you, it reflects a never-ending need to search for the next source of tech growth.


BIG NAMES, OUT IN THE COLD
Why some of tech's titans failed to crack this year's IT 100

DELL
Dell Inc. (DELL ) has suffered mightily in the past year, so it's little surprise it slipped off our Information Technology 100 ranking of the top-performing tech companies. Consider that it was still the world's biggest PC maker in 2006, when Dell ranked No. 15 on our list. Since then, Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ ). has bumped it aside, stealing sales and market share with clever advertising and crowd-pleasing products. A shakeup in the executive suite returned founder Michael Dell to the CEO job. Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Dell's accounting. Dell's traditional strengths—a low-cost model of selling gear over the Internet, a strong U.S. corporate customer base, and an emphasis on desktop computers—suddenly look like weaknesses in a world where laptops dominate and sales growth is strongest in U.S. consumer-oriented stores and in developing nations. Dell's preliminary 2006 sales totaled about $57.1 billion, up just 2% from 2005. That compares with a 19% growth rate in 2004. With Michael Dell back in charge, all sorts of changes are on the table. Dell is even developing specific computer lines for big retailers like Wal-Mart (WMT ).

SAP
A new line of software from SAP will let customers tap into programs on an SAP server and use SAP functions without installing and maintaining them on their own computers. The strategy could appeal to small and midsize companies that don't have big IT departments. But it also puts SAP into more direct competition with companies such as Salesforce.com and could suck sales from SAP's traditional software lines. Investors are nervous, knocking SAP's stock price down 12% since January and pushing it off our list, down from No. 39 last year. Things don't figure to get much easier, as archrival Oracle Corp. (ORCL ) is aggressively pushing into SAP strongholds, including manufacturing. In a tacit admission that SAP needs to listen more closely to its users, company overseers in March promoted customer-relations specialist Léo Apotheker to deputy CEO. In two years he is likely to succeed CEO Henning Kagermann.

MOTOROLA
No great mystery why Motorola Inc. (MOT ) was No. 11 last year: Its ultraslim RAZR phone was sizzling. But where's the follow-up? Facing price cutting by rivals in hot emerging markets such as Latin America and a slew of new premium phones flooding Europe, Motorola had to slash RAZR prices. Then it didn't release enough new phones with multimedia features to take advantage of the most advanced wireless networks. Fourth-quarter profits tumbled 48%, to $624 million. If CEO Ed Zander can't do better with the phones he just rolled out, his job could be in jeopardy.

SPRINT NEXTEL
Sprint made a name in mobile phones by being quick to roll out the latest data services, such as picture mail and digital music. But in 2004, to compete against larger rivals Cingular and Verizon Wireless (VZ ), Sprint bought Nextel for $35 billion. Ever since, it has struggled with customer defections and drops in per-user revenue. Customers bolted as network reliability suffered, especially on the Nextel side. And rivals have beaten Sprint to market with hot new phones. Sprint lost 306,000 subscribers during the fourth quarter of 2006, and it continues to lag Cingular (now AT&T) and Verizon in customer retention. CEO Gary Forsee is investing in projects such as a new broadband wireless network and slashing costs. As Sprint's share price falls, some speculate that the company, which was No. 36 a year ago, may end up as an acquisition target.

E*TRADE
E*Trade Financial Corp., (ETFC )like other online brokers, is still waiting for individual investors to trade stocks the way they did in the days before the dot-com bubble burst. But there's no indication that's about to happen, despite the bull market of the past few years. Also, ferocious competition between online brokers to slash commission costs is limiting revenue growth. That helps explain how E*Trade slipped from its No. 28 rank on last year's IT100 list. Shares of E*Trade, now at around 25, are trading about 5% below the 52-week high reached in early January.

The IT 100 Companies
1 Amazon.com
2 America Movil
3
Telefonica
4
Hon Hai Precision Ind.
5 Telenor
6
Apple Computer
7
AT&T
8
Nintendo
9
Microsoft
10 China Mobile
11
Research In Motion
12 VimpelCom
13
BT Group
14
Bharti Airtel
15
Mobile Telesystems
16
Accenture
17 Nokia
18
Millicom Intl. Cellular
19 Google
20
Cisco Systems
21
International Business Machines
22
Oracle
23
Tata Consultancy Services
24
Anixter International
25 Verizon Communications
26
COSMOTE MOBILE TELECOM.
27 Koninklijke KPN
28 Wistron
29
Asustek Computer
30 Infosys Technologies
31 Telekomunikasi Indonesia
32
MEMC Electronic Materials
33 Grupo Iusacell
34
Siemens
35 Hewlett-Packard
36 NVIDIA
37
Applied Materials
38
Liberty Global
39
Softbank
40
ASML Holding
41
SMART Modular Technologies
42
Nanya Technology
43 High Tech Computer
44
Rogers Communications
45 Lam Research
46
TD AMERITRADE Holding
47 Amkor Technology
48 Avnet
49
Wipro
50 NII Holdings
51 Canon
52
DIRECTV Group
53
Siliconware Precision Industries
54
KDDI
55 LM Ericsson
56 VTech Holdings
57
Hynix Semiconductor
58
Fidelity National Information Svcs.
59
Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg.
60
Varian Semiconductor Equipment
61
CDW
62 Comcast
63 Compal Electronics
64 Windstream
65
Autodesk
66
Amphenol
67
Powerchip Semiconductor
68 Toshiba
69 SAIC
70
Cognizant Tech. Solutions
71
Alltel
72
CommScope
73
Satyam Computer Services
74 L-3 Communications Holdings
75
Digital China Holdings
76 HCL Technologies
77
Inventec
78 Qimonda
79
Arrow Electronics
80 Elpida Memory
81 Tokyo Electron
82
Telus
83 Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri
84 Harris
85 Quanta Computer
86 Nikon
87 Automatic Data Processing
88 EMC
89 Qualcomm
90 SES
91
Shaw Communications
92
Acer
93
Alliance Data Systems
94
Priceline.com
95
KLA-Tencor
96
Advanced Semiconductor Engineering
97
FIserv
98
Adobe Systems
99 D-Link
100
Logitech International

Source : http://www.businessweek.com/magazin...=technology_technology+index+page_top+stories
 
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