Dell Loses Mobile Boss Ron Garriques

Dell’s president of the communication solutions group, Ron Garriques, who oversaw the development of the Streak and smartphones, is leaving the PC maker following a restructuring that eliminated his group.

Garriques will stay on through 28 January, 2011 and then serve as a consultant through the rest of the year, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Garriques will receive a $1.44 million (£905,000) severance payment, an incentive plan payment of $378,000 (£237,000), and for his consulting services, two lump-sum payments of $3.15 million (£1.9 million) on or before 28 February and 31 December.

No Group To Lead

Garriques’ group was eliminated, a Dell spokesperson told the Wall Street Journal, because smartphones and tablets have “grown to be more than a consumer-focused initiative” and folding the devices into other units will help the company to sell more of them. The Associated Press reports that the new groups are: large enterprises, public, small and medium business, and consumer.

Garriques was recruited to Dell in 2007 from Motorola, where he oversaw its successful mobile phone division. During Garriques’ tenure, Dell worked to revamp its consumer offerings and identity, first with the Adamo – a thin and lovely notebook with which it (not so successfully) worked to disrupt “perceptions of what personal computing is today” according to a statement – and later with smartphones.

After US carriers failed to be impressed by Dell’s initial designs, the PC maker struck deals with carriers in Brazil and China and released its first smartphones abroad, before eventually getting AT&T to sign on for a version of its Android-running Mini 3.

Since then Dell has also launched the Streak, a device with a 5-inch (on the diagonal) display, which early reviewers found a bit awkward, as it was overly big for a smartphone but a touch small for a tablet.

Smartphone Push

More recently, Dell launched the Venue Pro, a smartphone geared for enterprise users running Windows Phone 7. That launch, too, was not without its glitches, as some handsets shipped with batteries labelled “Engineering Samples” and others had difficulty connecting to protected WiFi networks.

In an example of the overlap between Dell’s mobile device initiatives and its enterprise efforts, it recently announced that it will replace its employees’ BlackBerry handsets with Dell smartphones. Research in Motion dismissed the announcement as a publicity stunt, and one analyst told eWEEK that, as Windows Phone 7 seeks to appeal to both consumers and enterprise users, it’s something of a “hybrid,” and so the professional advantage goes to RIM.

Dell will be moving the marketing for its tablets and smartphones to its business group, while development of next-generation products will be led by John Thode but under the guidance of Jeff Clarke, the Associated Press reported. Clarke is currently Dell’s vice chairman of operations and technology.

Dell will announce the financial results of its third quarter 18 November. During its second quarter, it its consumer unit reported revenue of $2.9 billion (£1.8 billion), which was down from $3.2 billion (£2 billion) the quarter before and flat year over year.

Michelle Maisto

Michelle Maisto covers mobile devices, Android and Apple for eWEEK and is also a food writer.

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