back to article Symantec sources claim exec teams in place by April Fools' Day

Symantec execs will line up under the classic security or information management divisions from April Fools’ Day – no, seriously – amid talk that senior management may revive the Veritas storage brand. Weeks ago, El Chan revealed UK boss Simon Moor had upped sticks and left Huw Owen, head of EMEA, in temporary charge of local …

  1. Locky

    Still lots of love for Veritas

    Ain't that the truth

    I'm here all week, please tip your waitress

  2. Down not across

    Veritas

    amid talk that senior management may revive the Veritas storage brand.

    Oh, haven't done good enough job tarnishing and destroying it yet?

  3. Vince

    Yes the name was well loved because the products did actually work. Unfortunately the name won't put the products that Symantec have butchered and totally destroyed back together again will it!

  4. Daniel von Asmuth
    Gimp

    Quid est Veritas?

    What old Veritas products will survive? (not to mention Peter Norton's brand name).

  5. borg95
    Mushroom

    Got out in time

    pheww i saw this nightmare coming... I left just in time... People have been jumping ship continuously for the last 1yr.

    The last senior leader with half a brain was the previous CEO who they fired, becuase he wanted to do it properly and not bow to wall street pressure.

    RIP SYMC

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Hmmm

    In the real world, companies that break themselves up generally do so to line the pockets of the insiders in control. Part of that process (of lining their pockets) involves freeing up capital to pay themselves. And again, generally speaking this is done by the who sale firing of a very large percentage of the work force. It is quick, painless (to the insiders) and incredibly simple. Naturally most of the "insiders" who are behind all this will quickly and quietly fade into the night after the deed is done. The problem with all this of course is also very simple; In the process of gutting the company's workforce, the money saved, which should have gone back into the company, goes instead into the pockets of the insiders. What is left is usually just a shell of the former company. After a year or 2 it will be sold for pennies on the dollar. (often to the same group that plundered it, and left it for dead) Of course some companies are so huge that this process is done on a smaller scale repeatedly without noticeable effect to the casual observer; HP comes to mind. But the truth is that HP today is barely a shadow of its former shelf. But witness the fact that a multitude of insiders over the years have walked away with what adds up to billions in share holder equity.

    Which brings me to my final point; the money that is lining the pockets of those concocting these "deals" does not belong to them, it belongs to the share holders.

  7. gannett
    WTF?

    > at risk of redundancy ten days ago, and are believed to number tens of thousands of individuals.

    Me thinks that's a big fat exaggeration or blatant error. Would make it a 40% RIF.

    http://www.symantec.com/en/uk/about/profile/business.jsp has ... More than 21,500 employees worldwide.

    That's a bit unlikely.

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