Lenovo Group Ltd, the world's third-largest personal-computer
maker, has begun selling computers under its own name outside China
for the first time since buying International Business Machines
Corp's PC unit.
Two Lenovo desktop PCs and three laptops aimed at businesses
with fewer than 100 employees went on sale on Thursday, Lenovo told
reporters in New York. Half the PCs will run on chips made by
Advanced Micro Devices Inc, a setback to Intel Corp's attempts to
shore up its market share.
The Lenovo-branded computers are trying to help Chief Executive
Officer William Amelio build name recognition as he battles bigger
rivals Dell Inc and Hewlett-Packard Co for a larger share of the
small-business market. Before, Lenovo sold only products inherited
from IBM - such as the ThinkPad notebook - outside China. Those
products target large and medium-size businesses.
"We've seen Lenovo transform from a dominant regional vendor to
a Tier 1 worldwide PC vendor," said Matthew Wilkins, a Bracknell,
England-based senior analyst with market researcher iSuppli.
Lenovo's decision to use more Advanced Micro chips is a further
boost to market share gains by Intel's only rival in PC
microprocessors. Sunnyvale, California-based Advanced Micro passed
20 per cent of the market for the key component of computers in the
fourth quarter for the first time in four years.
Lenovo desktop PCs, which start at US$349, are the first the
company is selling outside China with Advanced Micro chips. Its
ThinkCenter desktop line and ThinkPad laptops use Intel chips
exclusively. Lenovo PCs with the Advanced Micro chips are available
in 11 markets, including the United States, Mexico, Brazil, France,
India, Australia and New Zealand, said Bryan Thomas, worldwide
product manager for Lenovo's new J series PCs.
"We're excited about the relationship and will be working with
Lenovo to expand the product line in the near future," said Bart
Arnold, Advanced Micro's worldwide consumer product marketing
manager. The company had no laptop or server business with
Lenovo.
Samuel Dusi, executive director of marketing for Lenovo's
notebook business, said the company continues to consider using
Advanced Micro processors in its Think-branded products.
The Lenovo-branded computers include customer care software
reachable with one button and functions that let users quickly back
up and restore data and get help.
"The small-business customer has been saying, `We don't want to
worry about our computers; we want to worry about our business,'"
Thomas said.
Lenovo began as a Chinese company, and Asia accounts for more
than half its PC shipments. The company has about a 15 per cent
share of the large-enterprise market and about 6 per cent in the
small-business segment globally, Lenovo said today.
Laptops bearing the Lenovo brand start at US$599 and PCs with
flat-panel monitors sell for US$349 to US$499. Lenovo-branded
products will probably be sold at Office Depot Inc stores in the US
alongside Think-branded machines. Lenovo began selling ThinkPad
notebooks at Office Depot stores in November.
The new machines are available today through other resellers and
through the Lenovo website.
"They can't invest in IBM any more because they don't own that
brand, so the sooner they get away from that the better," Roger
Kay, an analyst at Endpoint Technologies Associates Inc in Wayland,
Massachusetts, said in an interview.
A second series of laptops with wide screens will be introduced
in March, and another series will be available in the second
quarter.
(China Daily February 25, 2006)