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EMC's Tucci changes mind, to stay on as CEO into 2013

EMC's Tucci changes mind, to stay on as CEO into 2013

Announces change on same day that EMC reports 2011 sales rose to $20B-plus

EMC CEO Joe Tucci has said he would honour a request from EMC's board and remain chairman and CEO into 2013.

Tucci this morning also said his eventual replacement as CEO will come from EMC senior management team.

"After much soul-searching, I have agreed to extend my role as chairman and CEO into 2013," Tucci said. "I've started to increase the responsibilities of my senior team. When the time is right, my successor will be named."

Tucci last fall had disclosed plans to step down as CEO at the end of this year, and to continue to serve as chairman of its board through 2016.

EMC today also announced that fourth quarter sales grew 17 per cent to $US5.6 billion and that revenue for all of 2011 increased by 18 per cent to $US20 billion.

Fourth quarter earnings increased by 32 per cent to $US832 million. EMC said its full year net income was $US2.5 billion, up 30% from 2010.

During the earnings call, Tucci credited the company's increasing focus on Cloud computing for the strong results.

"There's no doubt that Cloud computing is completely transforming the IT industry and that Big Data promises to have a similarly profound effect on transforming the way we work and live," Tucci said.

EMC's chief financial officer, David Goulden, said he expects the company "to achieve 2012 consolidated revenue of $US22 billion".

The company also expects to repurchase $US700 million worth of its common stock in 2012, he said.

Tucci has said in the past that EMC's would be focusing its efforts on hybrid cloud computing, which includes both public cloud and private cloud infrastructures, as well as Big Data analytics.

In 2010, EMC purchased Greenplum , the maker of a Hadoop database appliance.

For 2011, EMC generated operating cash flow of $US5.7 billion and free cash flow of $US4.4 billion, increases of 25 per cent and 29 per cent year-over-year, respectively.

In 2011, EMC reported $US10.8 billion in cash and investments.

Leading EMC's revenue growth was its servers hypervisor product: VMware. The division reported a 27% year over year revenue increase. VMware's gains were followed by EMC's mid-tier storage division, which includes its Clariion arrays, with 24% revenue growth and the company's Symmetrix storage systems division reporting 12 per cent sales growth.

EMC said that its unified storage unit, which includes the midrange and entry-level VNX and VNXe arrays, gained 2000 new customers in the fourth quarter of 2011. The company's backup and recovery products, which include the Data Domain appliance and Avamar software backup product that include data deduplication functionality, exceeded $US2 billion in fourth quarter revenue.

EMC's clustered network-attached storage (NAS) product, Isilon, saw a year-over-year doubling of its revenue in the fourth quarter.

EMC also continued to invest heavily in its joint effort with Cisco, dubbed the Virtual Computing Environment (VCE) Company. VCE sells a pre-configured and tested hardware/software platform that includes Cisco's Unified Computing System (UCS), EMC storage, and VMware vSphere.

EMC invested about $US3.5 billion in VCE in 2011, down from $US6.4 billion in 2010. EMC said almost 1700 reseller partners began offering the VCE platform in 2011.

EMC said VCE "continued to close in on the company's billion-dollar annualized revenue run-rate target" in 2011.

EMC said it gained marketshare and made strategic investments in research and development totaling 11 per cent or about $US2.2 billion, of its annual consolidated 2011 revenue in Big Data and cloud computing projects.

The introduction of new products such as the EMC VNX unified storage and EMC Symmetrix VMAX families and products from EMC's Isilon, Data Domain and Avamar portfolios contributed to market share gains and the expansion of the company's addressable market in 2011, EMC said.

Additionally, EMC said it further strengthened alignment with strategic partners as demonstrated by the strong momentum of VCE and expanded relationships with technology, solutions and service providers around the world in 2011, when more than 1700 partners began selling its products for the first time.

EMC said its US sales rose 16 per cent in the fourth quarter to $US3 billion.

Lucas Mearian covers storage, disaster recovery and business continuity, financial services infrastructure and health care IT for Computerworld. Follow Lucas on Twitter at @lucasmearian , or subscribe to Lucas's RSS feed . His e-mail address is lmearian@computerworld.com .

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