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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

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Motion Computing Laying Off 15 - 20% of Work Force

- Rob Bushway

Thanks to a tip from a reader, I  learned today that Motion Computing is laying off 15 - 20% of its employees.

I contacted Mike Stinson of Motion Computing to learn more and he shared the following with me in an interview just a couple of hours ago:

  • The reduction in work force is 15 - 20%, comprising of about 40 employees.
  • The cuts are coming from three different areas in the company: 1) Reduction of inside sales to utilizing 100% of channel partners, 2) removal of a duplication of effort between Motion and their manufacturing partners (Compal and Pegatron) , 3) admin and marketing. The biggest cuts are coming from #1 and #2 above.
  • This is the third series of layoffs in the last 12 months, the most recent coming in December. The first layoff, in April of last year, was due to the cancellation of a development project.
  • Motion is still experiencing 30% growth year to year, but were projecting more. They are not hitting previously set milestones which were used to justify personnel hires, so they are having to bring expenses in line with current revenue.
  • Milestones were originally set without fully comprehending the extremely long adoption cycle in the healthcare field, in which they are marketing the C5 Tablet PC. It is taking much longer than originally thought to move from trial to implementation (ie, closing the sales loop). They feel very good about the F5 and the Field Force vertical, which should bring the points in the adoption cycle much closer together.
  • The current sales pipeline looks very healthy and they are still encouraged about the healthcare vertical space.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008 4:04:06 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
30% growth year to year yet 3 layoffs in the past year? Sounds odd to me.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008 4:12:00 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Maybe if they hadn't abandoned the consumer market they wouldn't have to give (at least some) folks the pink slip.

Just a thought.
Thursday, March 27, 2008 10:05:29 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
From the product specs, F5 is basically the twin brother of C5 in a different color. So it was really Plan_B for C5: C5 is not doing too well reading between the lines, otherwise you would have seen all kinds of bragging about it in the press. If you're the CEO of a brand-new hospital or the owner of a brand-new clinic, then it might be a good idea to consider the C5, otherwise there is really no compelling reason. Plus most doctors are probably allergic to the handwriting recognition software. Motion should lower their prices and fix their design mistakes: Crappy display viewability on the LE1700 compared to the LE1600, horrible LOUD LE1600/LE1700 keyboard, stale slow LS800, horrible battery life when WWAN activated, the list goes on.
Jonathan West
Friday, March 28, 2008 9:36:30 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
If Motion were truly betting their company on the healthcare sector then Motions a SELL for me. I've been in IT software for over 10 years and, in Asia/Australia, no consensus is made or decided about patient software and the myriad of complexities in healthcare. I estimate it will still be another 10 years away and then a hardware decision will really come of age.

I've been travelling with the LE1600 and found this to be a good machine. Terrible trying to deal with Motion directly (and now it will be even worse) but I thankfully found a great Motion VAR. If Motion had only improved the LE1700 (firewire, improved monitor chipset (that works), 2.5" drives instead of capacity limited hard-to-find 1.8" and a higher processor speed) then they would have had a new market and an upgrade market as well but they blew that one too!

Bad luck to the workforce and just terrible management they've had three rounds of lay-offs.

Matthew Holden
Singapore
www.podasia.net
Friday, March 28, 2008 9:41:08 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Looking at our numbers, year over year, our Motion sales are nearly identical to what they were in Q1 2007 so we haven't seen a decline, but neither have we seen an increase.

The Motion C5 has been slow for organizations to adopt but we are seeing tremendous interest (and selling units) to companies in life sciences areas such as clinical studies. Also, we have seen three large hospitals in our area adopt it in the ER so I think that sales will increase as more referenceable accounts are available.
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