Computer giant Hewlett-Packard, a stalwart through decades of shifts in America's technology landscape, is dividing itself into two companies in its most drastic attempt yet to adjust to new markets.

The ailing company that was founded 75 years ago in a Palo Alto garage was synonymous with Silicon Valley.

"HP was Silicon Valley. That's how Silicon Valley started," says Marco Iansiti, a professor at the Harvard Business School who heads the Technology and Operations Management Unit. "It's one of those beautiful, original Silicon Valley stalwarts that is in some ways winding down or breaking up into individual pieces."

HP has laid off more than 40,000 workers in recent years; mergers that were meant to help it compete have not panned out.

HP confirmed the plan this morning, saying it's separating "into two industry-leading public companies."

NPR's Jim Zarroli reports for our Newscast unit:

"One company will be called Hewlett-Packard Enterprise, and it will focus on technology infrastructure software and services. The other, HP Inc., will sell printers and what the company calls personal systems — or PCs.

"Hewlett Packard is a legendary Silicon Valley pioneer. It has 300,000 employees and $112 billion in revenue. But it has struggled to adapt to an era where mobile devices have replaced PCs. And the company has been under pressure from shareholders and analysts to split."

Current HP CEO Meg Whitman will become the president and CEO of Hewlett-Packard Enterprise, as well as chairing HP Inc.'s board. The CEO post at HP Inc. will be filled by Dion Weisler, an executive who now leads the printing and personal systems division.

Reuters reports that HP's printing and personal computing businesses account for about half the company's revenue and profit, according to its latest quarterly financial results. The agency adds that HP's market capitalization is currently around $66 billion.

"Nimbleness may be the defining characteristic of technology companies over the next couple of years," Whitman said on a morning investor call. "We aim to be two Fortune 50 companies but a lot more nimble, a lot more focused."

As Bloomberg News notes, the move is an about-face for Whitman, who cut off a plan to split HP when she was brought on to turn things around back in 2011. We'll note that Whitman's former company, eBay, announced its own split last week, saying it would break off its PayPal service.

As it attempted to adapt its business model in recent years, Hewlett-Packard made several dubious acquisitions, including the disastrous $10 billion purchase of search company Autonomy that "erased $8.8 billion from its books" in 2012. And just four years after it bought Electronic Data Systems for nearly $14 billion in 2008, HP took an accounting charge of $8 billion on the deal.

Since reaching a recent low of less than $12.50 in November of 2012, HP's stock has been on the rebound: It topped $38 in August of this year and rose above $37 in early trading as news of the split spread Monday.

NPR's Rob Szypko contributed to this report.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

From NPR News, this is All Things Considered. I'm Melissa Block.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

I'm Robert Siegel and now to All Tech Considered.

(MUSIC)

SIEGEL: We'll start with the big tech news of the day. One of the oldest and biggest computer companies in Silicon Valley - among the biggest in the world in fact - is splitting up. Here's NPR's Elise Hu to tell us more about Hewlett-Packard.

ELISE HU, BYLINE: It's not mentioned with the hot-tech company names anymore. Hewlett-Packard isn't Apple, Google, or Facebook. But in many ways, HP put Silicon Valley on the map when it was founded 75 years ago in a Palo Alto garage.

MARCO IANSITI: HP was Silicon Valley. That's how Silicon Valley started.

HU: Marco Iansiti is a professor at the Harvard Business School and leads the Tech and Operations Management Unit.

IANSITI: It's one of those sort of in a beautiful, kind of original Silicon Valley stalwarts that is in some ways winding down or breaking up into individual pieces.

HU: Both will be publicly traded companies with revenues of more than $50 billion annually.

MEG WHITMAN: We aim to be two big Fortune 50 companies but a lot more nimble, a lot more focused. Nimbleness may be the defining characteristic for technology companies over the next couple years.

HU: That's current HP CEO Meg Whitman. She'll head the new enterprise company - overseeing servers, networking, storage and the cloud business. HP Inc. gets the companies computing side - notebooks, desktops and the ubiquitous HP printers.

WHITMAN: This has been a very detailed and thoughtful process about how to roll this out to our many, many constituencies. So I feel really good about our plan.

HU: 5,000 HP employees will lose their jobs in this move. HP stock shot up 5 percent on the split-up news. It happens just a week after another Silicon Valley split. Just last Monday, eBay announced its payments on PayPal would spin off on its own. Harvard business school's Iansiti.

IANSITI: There's an explosion of connected devices that's changing business models for every sector and every company. And you can see the repercussions of that on all sorts of traditional businesses.

HU: ...Which means brace for more turbulence ahead.

IANSITI: I think we'll see a lot of uncertainty - a lot of churn over the next couple of years.

HU: And Hewlett-Packard will face that uncertainty as two companies rather than one. Elise Hu, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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