Sun reorganizes, cuts up to 18 percent of workforce

The cuts will affect between 5,000 and 6,000 employees. Sun is also reorganizing its software division, a move it said stands as “a recognition of the comprehensive role software plays in the company’s growth strategy.”

In addition, Sun said that Rich Green, the company’s executive vice president of software, has decided to leave the company. Sun said Green “has been an instrumental force in evolving Sun’s Software strategy and successful business execution across its diverse portfolio.”

Sun’s software division changes include a new group, Application Platform Software, which includes Sun’s MySQL database and infrastructure technology like the GlassFish application server.

The Cloud Computing & Developer Platforms group will focus on Web-based services as well as Sun’s NetBeans development platform. Also, Sun’s Solaris, virtualization and system management software teams will be moved into the company’s systems group.

All changes are effective immediately, Sun said.

Sun said the economy sparked the changes.

“Today, we have taken decisive actions to align Sun’s business with global economic realities and accelerate our delivery of key open source platform innovations,” CEO Jonathan Schwartz said in a statement.

At the end of October, Sun blamed the downturn in the financial sector for a $1.68 billion quarterly loss. The collapse of Wall Street over the last two months eliminated several key Sun customers.

Sun has also been struggling overall for some time due to slumping sales of its high-end servers.

Angry Sun shareholders have been pressing company officials to improve its performance. Sun’s share price has fallen from about $17 at the beginning of this year to roughly $4 at the start of trading Friday.

“The fact that the stock has been diving and diving and diving and is never pulling out of this dive, you start to wonder — how long can you keep diving before you lose all your stockholders?” one shareholder said during the company’s recent shareholder meeting. “How long can you be in freefall and still survive?”

Schwartz told the crowd that Sun is trying to reinvent itself by developing new server systems and attracting new customers with its open-source software portfolio. But that strategy has not borne fruit quickly.

To that end, the scale of Sun’s layoffs was not out of line, said Stephen O’Grady, an analyst with Redmonk. “Yes, these are pretty deep cuts, but they’re dictated by the company’s performance over the past few quarters.”

Regardless of Sun’s finances, assets like MySQL and GlassFish are valuable assets, and “will survive in one incarnation or another,” O’Grady added.

But its sales execution has not matched the quality of its portfolio, said another Redmonk analyst, James Governor, via e-mail.

Part of the problem is that Sun’s success “is still overly wedded to the financial services market, a market that has literally gone off a cliff,” Governor said. But the company has recently gained some major deals in the media market, he added.

“I actually thought Sun was more likely to go private than make a round of cuts, but there isn’t exactly a lot of paper flying around at the moment to fund such a deal,” Governor said.

Neither analyst knew exactly what prompted Green’s departure, but Governor said he was “a little surprised. … [Green] was very much Jonathan Schwartz’s hire.”

Sun shares stood at $4.05 in early trading, down slightly from its previous close of $4.08. But the Morgan Stanley high technology index fell about 3.7 percent.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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