1999 – MEASURE Magazine

January – February 1999 HP Takes Steps to Preserve Art and Cultural History

  • HP gas chromatographs and Vectra PCs assist Getty Conservation Institute to preserve art and cultural sites. 4-8
  • Roseville recycling center recycles 3 million pounds of obsolete HP equipment each month. 9
  • HP employee, Ron Gonzales, becomes first Latino mayor of San Jose, Calif. 10-11
  • Coca-Cola and its brand equity is featured as a “Best of the Best.” 12-15
  • HP Finland is country’s biggest IT vendor and testing ground for HP’s electronic business strategy. 16-18
  • HP servers power Sharp Corp. in Osaka, Japan. 19-21
  • Dr. Cyberspace lists favorite Web resources and results of employee survey of HP’s intranet site. 22-23
  • Lew Platt discusses Computer Systems Policy Project, a group of CEOs from 13 hardware companies who discuss important trade and technology issues. 24-25
  • John Doyle, executive vice president, talks about corporate objectives, the HP Way, hiring consultants. 26-27
  • Vectra PCs help autistic children in Germany learn. 29
  • HP product rollout at Madison Square Garden, NY, features 20 new products. 29
  • HP library Web site makes reference resources available in one place. 30
  • Over 300,000 shoppers/year buy equipment and supplies from HP’s Shopping Village Web site. 30
  • HP’s intranet and Internet Web sites listed. 31

March-April 1999 Banking on the Future of the Formerly Poor

  • Singapore Airlines is profiled as this issue’s “Best of the Best” companies for its customer service. 4-7
  • HP and Motorola test Iridium of satellites and receivers provides worldwide telephone coverage. 8-10
  • HP adopts one-to-one marketing strategy to identify profitable and unprofitable customers. 11
  • Bob Wayman, CFO, discusses “Triple 5” challenge, which identifies three areas of expense control that will cut costs by 5 percent each. 14-17
  • HP donates calculators to help microlenders with credit analyses; microlenders make small loans to people in developing countries in Asia-Pacific to break cycle of poverty. 18-21
  • Julia Wirschborn transformed life as teen mom to HP marketing support technician. 22-23
  • Dr. Cyberspace tells how HP entities will form single gateway to intranet. 24-25
  • Lew Platt discusses President’s Club, sales, customer satisfaction. 26-27
  • HP donates Jornada handheld PCs to Singapore girl’s school program. 29
  • HP’s Y2K preparedness includes modified work schedules, limit on travel and internal meetings. 29
  • Loveland “Trivia Bowl” raises money for nonprofits. 30
  • Apollo consumer products to produce inkjet printers for under $100. 30
  • Fortune ranks HP 18 in “Most Admired Companies in America”. 30
  • HP’s African-American executives win Black Engineer of the Year awards. 31
  • President’s Quality Awards. 31

May-June 1999 HP: Maybe It’s Time We Move to a Two-Car Garage

  • Measure moves from print to online delivery. 2
  • Lucent Technologies is profiled as a “Best of the Best Company”; Lucents spin-off from AT&T is model for HP and new company spin-off. 4-7
  • HP launches print ad campaign to feature it’s E-services. 8-10
  • Joel Birnbaum, senior vice president of R&D and director of HP Labs, retires. 11-13
  • HP to split into two companies, announced March 2, 1999. 14
  • Process described of finding a name for the new company. 15
  • Prospects discussed for initial public offering (IPO) for the new company, “NewCo.” 18-19
  • Key changes in organization revealed for structure of new company. 20-22
  • Comparing the two business models of HP computer organization and NewCo’s measurement organization. 23
  • Process described for infrastructure decisions for NewCo. 24-25
  • Susan Packard Orr and Walter Hewlett discuss views on the realignment of HP and NewCo. 26-27
  • Interview with Dick Hackborn, retired leader of printer business, discusses view on realignment/NewCo. 28-29
  • Four new CEOs for computer and imaging announced. 30-31
  • Lab-on-a-chip and gene scanning are big opportunities for Life Sciences division. 32-33
  • Ned Barnholt discusses starting a new company, losing the HP name, vision for the new company. 34-35
  • President Lew Platt answers question on the restructuring. 36-37
  • Dr. Cyberspace discusses Y2K compliance and the realignment of the new company. 38-39
  • HP is official sponsor of women’s world cup soccer. 41
  • NewCo executive staff announced. 41
  • HP ranked 14 in Fortune’s 1998 ranking of top 500 companies. 41

May-June, 1999 Meeting Customers on Their Own Turf

  • Letter from the editor describes mostly negative reaction to the end of print version of Measure magazine. 2
  • “Best of the Best” profiles a lesson in customer service from the Ritz-Carlton Hotel. 4-7
  • NewCo’s (Agilent) future. General Managers of the six businesses discuss their strategy. 8-11
  • E-services media event showcases strategic partnerships. 12-14
  • HP’s aggressive program to attract college grads. 14-16
  • Dublin, Ireland’s Inkjet Manufacturing Unit workers meet customers face-to-face at computer stores. 17-19
  • Employee, Lee Lenhardt, is top HP sales representative. 20-21
  • Ned Barnholt, CEO of NewCo, discusses speed, focus and accountability at NewCo (Agilent). 22-23
  • Lew Platt says HP is ready for Y2K. 24-25
  • HP’s Call Representative Group helps U.S.-based customer support. 29
  • HP Desk, HP’s pioneer e-mail network begun 1982, to shut down last server in 1999. 29
  • HP is the official information technology sponsor for AmericaOne, the San Francisco-based challenger for the America’s Cup sailing competition. 30
  • HP contributes $30,000 in materials and equipment to Taiwan contest to deign assistance devices for people with mental and physical disabilities. 31
  • Plug Fest tests HP PC plug compatibility. 31

September-October 1999 In Stride with HP’s New CEO

  • Letter from the editor about Lew Platt’s retirement. 2
  • HP introduces new president and CEO, Carly Fiorina. 4-5
  • Interview with Dick Hackborn, in new role as HP chairman; CEO search and hiring. 6-9
  • India Software Operation, Bangalore, goes from 10 employees a decade ago to 700. 10-11
  • Agilent name launch ceremony held. 13-15
  • Agilent employee benefits revealed. 16-17
  • Ned Barnholt, Agilent’s president and CEO, discusses start and change. 18-19
  • New Technology High School in Napa, Calif., runs on HP network installation. 20-23
  • Employee Julius Paras directs Filipino-American youth organization. 24-25
  • Lew Platt comments on his retirement; new CEO Carly Fiorina reflects on HP career. 26-27
  • Carly Fiorina addresses four key priorities: vision and growth, focus and leverage, customer experience, HP brand. 28
  • China postal organization orders $500 million of equipment. 30
  • Women’s World Cup soccer Web site powered by HP 9000 enterprise servers. 31
  • HP sponsors Special Olympics Summer World Games. 31
  • Vectra computers used on gondola in Venice, Italy. 32

November-December 1999 Inventing the New HP

  • New HP brand goes back to roots of strategy, rules of the garage; branding lexicon is defined. 4-8
  • HP’s Y2K supplier readiness program is explained. 9-11
  • Lew Platt, president and CEO, retires after 33 years at HP. 12-13
  • Agilent’s acquisition and divestiture strategy is explained. 14-15
  • Agilent’s Day One, November 1, 1999, marks first day of business as a separate company. 16-17
  • “Dreams Made Real” Agilent advertising campaign launched. 18-19
  • Laser interferometer introduced in 1971 still used today to precisely measure computer-memory chips. 20
  • Ned Barnholt discusses Agilent’s ambitious goals. 21
  • Carly Fiorina discusses HP’s new branding campaign. 22
  • HP Way in action allows Doug McGhee to work at home and care for ill wife. 25
  • HP and Agilent executives meet with execs from world’s top telecommunications companies during Telecom99. 28-29