Tech giant Hewlett-Packard has bought Towers Perrin’s shares of
ExcellerateHRO, according to an internal memo sent to HP employees this week.
Chris Rittenmeyer, the CEO of ExcellerateHRO, is being replaced by Sanjiv
Anand, vice president, product portfolio, for ExcellerateHRO, according to the
memo.
“As the integration of EDS into HP progressed, HP determined it was in the
best interest to have exclusive ownership of ExcellerateHRO,” says an HP
spokeswoman, who declined to elaborate on details of the deal or personnel
moves.
ExcellerateHRO was created in 2005 through a partnership between EDS and
Towers Perrin, but hasn’t amassed many deals, causing experts to wonder about
the fate of the company. But in May, when HP bought EDS, experts wondered if the
PaloAlto-based technology company would step up its interest in HR outsourcing
and buy the remaining shares of ExcellerateHRO.
However this acquisition shouldn’t be a sign to the market that HP, which has
just dabbled in HR outsourcing deals, is getting into that business, says Michel
Janssen, managing director at Hackett Group, a Miami-based business process
outsourcing consultant.
“Don’t jump to the conclusion that this means that HP is committed to HR
BPO,” he says. “It could just mean that they are preparing for a sale.”
Other than signing an HR outsourcing deal with Nestle in 2006, the firm
doesn’t seem to be doing a lot of extensive HR outsourcing deals, experts say.
According to AMR Research, HP has 13 payroll deals that include other HR
administrative elements.
“The jury’s still out on whether Mark Hurd will continue to invest in HRO, as
he clearly wants to lock heads with IBM's IT business,” says Phil Fersht, an
analyst at AMR, referring to HP’s CEO. “My sense is, he’ll watch the space
closely for a couple of quarters and gauge whether HP should continue to play in
this space or focus elsewhere to combat IBM.”
—Jessica Marquez
Workforce
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