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Peregrine seeks second chance

By Bob Brown , Network World , 05/24/2004
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Having emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year, Peregrine this week will try to convince attendees at its annual customer conference that the company is here to stay and can help them better manage their networks.

Peregrine, which underwent extreme cost-cutting under previous CEO and fixer-upper Gary Greenfield to get itself in good enough shape to exit Chapter 11, is now looking to reinvest in technology and people in order to support existing products and deliver new ones. It will spread that word at its Synergy04 Global User Conference in Miami, where the company anticipates in the neighborhood of 500 attendees.

One thing attendees won't get is a clear picture of Peregrine's financial status given that the company only recently filed a statement for the 12-month period ending on March 31, 2003 (it posted a revenue drop vs. the year before, but was profitable) and has yet to say when it will resume issuing regular quarterly results. The San Diego company says by law it must stay tightlipped for now about its financials.

President and CEO John Mutch did, however, last week say that Peregrine plans to increase the number of service professionals on its staff expert in IT best practices and also is intent on boosting R&D spending. The 650-person company has shed close to 4,000 employees over the past few years and piled up billions in losses. 

"We cut deep….it's time to reinvest in the company," he said.

Peregrine this week will show customers - and competitors such as BMC - that it's not standing pat by introducing a new version of its helpdesk software. ServiceCenter 6 features improved Web and Windows clients, new reporting capabilities and makes it easier to add help desk users when new modules are fitted into ServiceCenter, the company says.

A new version of AssetCenter, the company's asset management product, is due in the fall.

Peregrine this week will also announce plans to combine its release management technology with change management technology from IBM Tivoli to make available a joint offering. Mutch said IBM's public support now as well as during the bankruptcy process is vital to Peregrine's sustainability (Peregrine generates around a fifth of its revenue through IBM).

Peregrine is also revising its pricing for new customers of its Service Control and Expense Control software. Whereas in the past a customer had to buy the same number of licenses for a new module as it had for the platform, customers will now be able to buy modules based more closely on the number of end users who actually need it.

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